Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Thank goodness for PolitiFact.Com

When I really want to know and understand what's happening I read "Truth-o-meter" at PolitiFact.Com.  This is the place where they've already sorted through all those half truths and out right lies so I don't have to.
Link:  http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/

Friday, February 12, 2010

I'm enjoying ...

Nathan Wirth's A Slice of Silence
http://integrallife.com/node/67114

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Wise quote ...

From The Quote Garden, "Wise Words" section ...

"God grant me the serenity to accept the people I cannot change, the courage to change the one I can, and the wisdom to know it's me. ~ Author unknown, variation of an excerpt from "The Serenity Prayer" by Reinhold Neibuhr

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Charles Caleb Colton quotes

Patience Rayn's Decodaquote from Saturday January 23, 2010 turned out to be a quote by Charles Caleb Colton:

"Men will wrangle for religion, write for it, fight for it, die for it; anything but live for it. "

Colton Caleb Colton (1780-1832), an English cleric and writer whose words and insights still continue to ring true two hundred plus years later. Such as this one, which remind me of Sarah Palin ...

"It is an easy and a vulgar thing to please the mob, and not a very arduous task to astonish them, but essentially, to benefit and improve them is a work fraught with difficulty, and teeming with danger."

Sarah Palin continually chooses the easy route - the path of pleasing and inflaming the fears and prejudices of the mob

Barack Obama continually chooses the more difficult path - the path of improvement for us all.

I know which path I'm on.

Thank you Barack.
Good-bye Sarah.

Reference Links:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Caleb_Colton
http://www.decodaquote.com/

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

I've Discovered TED

I haven't posted to his blog in so long.

When I first created this blog, blogging was a new and exciting event. Then came myspace and I had to try that as well. Followed by Facebook and pretty soon every place was offering blogging. That's when I lost interest. I realized, personally, I simply don't have that much to say. Let alone anything important to share.

But I do still find things I enjoy sharing with others, things I thing other may like.

Recently I discoverd TED (link: http://www.ted.com/index.php) TED's been out there for awhile, it's only new to me. None the less, it has many intersting videos of talks of interests given by people I admire and/or find fasinating.

One of my favorites is Jill Bolt Taylor talking about her "Stoke of Insight"
http://www.ted.com/index.php/talks/jill_bolte_taylor_s_powerful_stroke_of_insight.html

It moved me so much I had to purchase her book. It arrived this morning. Can't wait to read it.

Kind regards,
Deb

Saturday, May 06, 2006

An Appropriate and Fair Ending

"Mr Moussaoui, you came here to be a martyr and die in a big bang of glory; but to paraphrase the poet T.S. Eliot, instead, you will die with a whimper. You will spend the rest of your life in prison and you will never again get to speak, and that is an appropriate and fair ending." - Judge Leonie Brinkema

I Agree.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Are people finally waking up...

"In their statement, the bishops pledged to pray daily for the end of the war, for its American and Iraqi victims and for American leaders to find "truth, humility and policies of peace through justice." "We confess our preoccupation with institutional enhancement and limited agendas while American men and women are sent to Iraq to kill and be killed, while thousands of Iraqi people needlessly suffer and die, while poverty increases and preventable diseases go untreated," the statement said." -- Excerpted from article below

Are people finally waking up and coming (back) to their senses? Perhaps so! I welcome their prayers, I welcome their joining back with those who never wanted things to go this way in the first place, and those who have been praying for this "wake up" since day one. With gratitude ... Deb

http://www.commondreams.org/headlines05/1111-08.htm
Published on Friday, November 11, 2005 by FOX News
Methodist Bishops Repent Iraq War 'Complicity'
by Kaukab Jhumra Smith


WASHINGTON -- Ninety-five bishops from President Bush's church said Thursday they repent their "complicity" in the "unjust and immoral" invasion and occupation of Iraq.

"In the face of the United States administration's rush toward military action based on misleading information, too many of us were silent," said a statement of conscience signed by more than half of the 164 retired and active United Methodist bishops worldwide.

President Bush is a member of the United Methodist Church, according to various published biographies. The White House did not return a request for comment on the bishops' statement.

Although United Methodist leadership has opposed the Iraq war in the past, this is the first time that individual bishops have confessed to a personal failure to publicly challenge the buildup to the war.

The signatures were also an instrument for retired bishops to make their views known, said bishop Joseph H. Yeakel, who served in the Baltimore-Washington area from 1984 to 1996. The current bishop for the Baltimore-Washington area, John R. Schol, also signed the statement.

The statement avoids making accusations, said retired Bishop Kenneth L. Carder, instructor at Duke University's divinity school and an author of the document.

"We would have made the statement regardless of who the president was. It was not meant to be either partisan or to single out any one person," Carder said. "It was the recognition that we are all part of the decision and we are all part of a democratic society. We all bear responsibility."

Stith, who spent more than three years after his retirement working in East Africa -- including with Rwandan refugees -- said going to war over the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks did not solve the real problems behind them.

The real issues are that much of the world lives in poverty, desperation and depression, he said, while an affluent minority of the world often oppresses them. Americans need to take responsibility for their world, Stith said.

"To ignore things and to assume that persons in the government have all knowledge is to reject our franchise and our democracy," Stith said.

About six weeks ago, Carder discussed the idea of a public statement with other colleagues who "had concerns" about the war, and the idea just grew, Carder said.

Last week, the statement circulated during a biannual meeting of the Council of Bishops, "and before the week was out, we had 95 bishops," Carder said.

In their statement, the bishops pledged to pray daily for the end of the war, for its American and Iraqi victims and for American leaders to find "truth, humility and policies of peace through justice."

"We confess our preoccupation with institutional enhancement and limited agendas while American men and women are sent to Iraq to kill and be killed, while thousands of Iraqi people needlessly suffer and die, while poverty increases and preventable diseases go untreated," the statement said.

Some bishops declined to sign their names, although they supported the statement, Carder said.

This week's statement follows years of public opposition to the Iraq war by the church.

In May 2004, the Council of Bishops passed a resolution that "lamented the continued warfare" and asked the U.S. government to seek international help to rebuild Iraq. The church's women's division called for an end to the war in 2002. And in 2001, the church's head of social policy, Jim Winkler, said the push for war was "without any justification according to the teachings of Christ," according to a report by The (London) Observer.

Public approval of the war has steadily declined since the United States invaded Iraq in March 2003. At the time, seven of 10 Americans said the U.S. did the right thing. By this October, only four of 10 Americans did, according to CBS polls.

About 11 million people belong to the United Methodist Church, including 200,000 in the Baltimore-Washington area.

Carder and Stith said they hoped their statement would encourage more people to think about peacemaking.

"The only solution seems to be to stay the course. But if you're on the wrong course, you don't stay the course," Carder said. "At the heart of the Christian faith is the willingness to acknowledge mistakes."

Capital News Service contributed to this report.

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