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Wednesday, November 25, 2009
So Much for Transcending Race
Posted by: Carol Platt Liebau at 10:23 PM
Given how high the hopes were for Barack Obama -- and how many of those hopes were pinned on the candidate's supposed ability to bridge America's racial divide -- it is sobering to analyze this linked Gallup survey.

The President's approval has slid to 39% among whites; the only reason it remains in the high 40's overall is because he enjoys a 73% approval among non-whites (and even higher, understandably, in the African American community alone).  Apparently, the racial divide remains with us for the foreseeable future -- perhaps, ironically, worse than ever, to the extent that African Americans perceive any unfairness in the critiques of the President that they attribute, rightly or wrongly, to his race.

But even if the President has proved unable to transcend race, he has done a great favor for America, especially its young, albeit unwittingly. Every generation must be reminded anew about how precious freedom is, and how insidiously government can begin to take over -- and how destructive (to our liberties, to our economy, to our culture, even) an overweening, hyperactive, steroidal government can be. 

Jimmy Carter taught an earlier generation about the disaster that lefty economics and soft foreign policy creates.  Perhaps it may be that Barack Obama and his "Big Government knows best" agenda is doing the same thing.  And if that's the case, I'm thankful -- for that and so much more.




Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Christmas Outlawed
Posted by: Townhall.com Staff at 8:28 PM
From New Jersey:

Singing "Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer" might be okay in Maplewood-South Orange schools. But "Silent Night" and "Oh Come All Ye Faithful" are still out.

A board of education policy that prohibits celebratory religious music in district schools was upheld today by the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit.

The three-judge panel said there was "no constitutional violation" in the policy because other constitutional principles require public schools to remain strictly secular environments.

"Those of us who were educated in the public schools remember holiday celebrations replete with Christmas carols, and possibly even Chanukah songs, to which no objections had been raised. Since then, the governing principles have been examined and defined with more particularity," Judge Dolores Korman Sloviter wrote for the court.

The judges said public school administrations can discern which songs are most appropriate according to those constitutional guidelines because schools already are charged with the responsibility of creating a secular "inclusive environment" for students every day.






Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Blackwell Calls for Gen. Casey to be Fired
Posted by: Townhall.com Staff at 8:14 PM
Guest blog post by Ken Klukowski

In today’s American Thinker, former Ohio Sec. of State and U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Human Rights Commission Ken Blackwell calls for Gen. George Casey to be fired.

Sec. Blackwell’s beef with Gen. Casey is that in the aftermath of the Ft. Hood shooting, Casey emphasized the need for diversity and that this must shape how the Army responds, because if diversity suffered it would be an even worse tragedy.

Blackwell sharply disagrees. He makes the point that people who are colorblind or have heart murmurs cannot serve in uniform, no matter how patriotic they are. If these Americans cannot serve, then the military should have a zero-tolerance policy toward those making anti-American statements.
Read More...





Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Real Pilgrims Sought Purity, Not Tolerance or Diversity
Posted by: Michael Medved at 1:57 PM

As American families sit down to their traditional Thanksgiving feasts they will naturally recall the familiar story of the Pilgrims taught to every school kid and, in the process, distort the true character of the nation’s religious heritage.

Most children learn that the Mayflower settlers came to the New World to escape persecution and to establish religious freedom. But the early colonists actually pursued purity, not tolerance and sought to build fervent, faith-based utopias, not secular regimes that consigned religion to a secondary role. The distinctive circumstances that allowed these fiery believers of varied denominations to cooperate in the founding of a new nation help to explain America’s contradictory religious traditions – as simultaneously the most devoutly Christian society in the western world, and the country most accommodating to every shade of exotic belief and practice.

Concerning the Pilgrims who celebrated the First Thanksgiving in 1621, they didn’t travel directly from their English homes to the “hideous and desolate wilderness” of Massachusetts. They sailed the Atlantic only after living for twelve years in flourishing communities in Holland—the most tolerant and religiously diverse nation of Europe. They left the Netherlands not because that nation imposed too many religious restrictions but because the Dutch honored too few. The pluralism they found in Amsterdam and Leyden horrified the Pilgrims. They were separatists who considered themselves “a people apart” and who preferred isolation on a distant shore that facilitated the building of a unified, disciplined, strictly devout commonwealth, not some wide-open sanctuary for believers of every stripe. The famous Mayflower Compact defined their purpose explicitly as “the Glory of God and advancement of the Christian Faith…”

The like-minded Puritans who followed them (and whose much larger settlement of Massachusetts Bay annexed the Pilgrims’ Plymouth in 1691) showed similar determination to build a model of single-minded religious rigor. The leaders of this idealistic venture were in no sense the victims of oppression back home, but rather counted as wealthy and influential gentleman who wielded considerable political influence. Even after their fellow Puritans won total power (and executed a king in 1649) the Massachusetts colonists chose to remain in their “city upon a hill” in the New World rather than to return to the compromises and complications necessitated by the fractious politics of England. The famous shipboard sermon by which Governor John Winthrop inspired his flock for the challenges of their “errand into the wilderness” declared that “when God gives a special commission he looks to have it strictly observed in every article….to serve the Lord and work out our salvation under the power and purity of his holy ordinances.”

Beyond the four New England colonies (which each began as energetic theocracies representing various strands of Puritanism), other major settlements took shape according to the dreams and dictates of other denominations. William Penn and his fellow Quakers followed their “inner light” to establish Pennsylvania as a “holy experiment,” while the aristocratic Calvert family set up Maryland as a refuge and a base of operations for devout British Catholics. Even the less explicitly religious colonies, where early settlers seemed to care more about finding gold than finding God, received royal charters that declared their underlying mission of spreading the faith. Virginia’s charter described a mandate for the “propagating of Christian Religion as such People as yet live in Darkness.” At the first landing of the original Jamestown expedition (April 26, 1607), Captain Christopher Newport took it upon himself to erect the colony’s first structure: a large cross at Cape Henry to mark their arrival.

How, then, did these enthusiastic true believers with their often uncompromising standards ever manage to join together in a new nation in 1776 – a nation that has been characterized ever since by a religious diversity and inter-denominational cooperation altogether unprecedented in human history?

The Revolutionary struggle forced their hand, with soldiers from more than a dozen Christian traditions and sects (as well as a disproportionate representation of the colonies’ tiny Jewish minority) fighting side by side in the Continental Army. When General Washington ordered “divine services” to build morale among his weary troops, he made some effort to avoid excluding New England Congregationalists or Virginia Baptists or Carolina Methodists or, for that matter, the random Catholic or Mennonite. In the eight year struggle, Massachusetts soldiers served willingly under the brilliant Quaker General Nathanael Greene – even though their Puritan forebears might have been among those who order the occasional hanging of his co-religionists in the previous century.

Violent struggles had broken out from time to time in the past among various faith communities—with Puritans challenging Catholics for control of Maryland, for instance, and fighting the bloody Battle of the Severn in 1655. But for the most part the wide open spaces of the new continent allowed even the most impassioned theological enthusiasts to build their own spheres of influence without confronting or oppressing their potential rivals in far flung neighboring settlements. The constant threat of Indian violence and the even more dire menace of British suppression made some level of mutual respect a practical necessity, even for localities that bitterly disagreed.

The First Amendment to the Constitution ratified this arrangement of uncontested local authority with its careful wording: “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion…” The Constitutional formulation limited the power of the federal government to impose a single national faith, and to provoke the dangerous battles accompanying such an attempt, but did nothing in the eyes of the zealous founders to interfere with the established churches (that received direct government funding and endorsement) on the state level. The esteemed liberal scholar Laurence Tribe of Harvard Law School writes: “A growing body of evidence suggests that the Framers principally intended the Establishment of Religion Clause to perform two functions: two protect state religious establishments from national displacement, and to prevent the national government from aiding some, but not all, religions.” With this understanding in mind, religious voting restrictions (limiting the franchise to Trinitarian Protestant Christians, for instance) continued in several states for more than forty years under the Constitution.

The Pilgrims and their spiritual descendants never had to retreat from religious fervor or Biblical demands to join the new Republic, thanks to the continued existence of more or less autonomous, localized refuges and enclaves. No one can suggest that our Founders embraced secularism or relativism, but they did come to accept the notion of separate faith communities following their own distinctive rules while managing to live side-by-side and to cooperate where necessary.

Thanksgiving in that sense doesn’t celebrate religious freedom, but rather coexistence. We remain a nation of impassioned, fiercely committed, openly competing believers who have nonetheless established a long tradition of letting other faith communities go their own way. We can be pious and uncompromising at our own Thanksgiving tables, without menacing, or even questioning the very different proceedings in the home next door. The limitless boundaries and vast empty land of the fresh continent, plus the challenges of a long Revolutionary struggle, gave the faith-filled fanatics of the founding the chance for a freedom more profound than mere religious tolerance: the right, in their own communities, to be left alone.

A version of this column, trimmed by nearly 300 words, appeared on Monday in USA TODAY. This represents Michael's original draft, with additional information.






Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Why Are We Thankful This Year? Cap-And-Trade Hasn't Passed!
Posted by: Townhall.com Staff at 1:11 PM
Todd Hollenbeck at Americans for Tax Reform gives us ten reasons we should be thankful cap-and-trade hasn't passed.
1. We don’t have to pay over $100 billion in additional taxes.
2. We don’t have to pay an additional $3.6 trillion in gas taxes.
3.We won’t lose 1.1 million jobs between 2012 and 2030 and 2.5 million each year after that.
4. We haven’t made new industries that are dependent on government handouts for their survival.
5. We don’t have a new bureaucracy in place to allocate and sell carbon credits that will increase corruption and favoritism in Washington, DC.
6. Our energy costs will not go up by $1500 per year for a family of four.
7. We won’t have our national debt increase by 26 percent by 2030. An increase of $116,600 for a family of four.
8. We won’t have protectionist tariffs to create trade wars and cause increased prices and shortages on the goods we need.
9. We won’t have a reduction in GDP of $9.4 trillion between 2012 and 2030.
10. We won’t have a 58% increase in gas prices.





Wednesday, November 25, 2009
NBC Rejects PETA Advertisement Protesting Turkeys On Thanksgiving
Posted by: Townhall.com Staff at 12:01 PM
It's easy to see why.

'Grace': PETA's Thanksgiving ad

Tags: PETA



Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Beck's Message for Obama: Time to Get Your Priorities Straight
Posted by: Meredith Jessup at 11:35 AM







Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Past Two Weeks Has Seen Increased Support For More Troops In Afghanistan
Posted by: Townhall.com Staff at 10:43 AM
47% of Americans want to increase troops in Afghanistan, with an additional 9% of Americans wanting the number of troops to stay the same.

Two weeks ago, 44% wanted a troop increase, with 7% wanting the levels to stay the same.

This slight increase means that Americans are still very much undecided about what exactly they want to do in Afghanistan. But perhaps the trend means the idea of watered-down diplomacy and softball foreign policy is loosing steam.




Wednesday, November 25, 2009
In-Orbit Marine Welcomes Daughter Into The World
Posted by: Townhall.com Staff at 10:20 AM
It's only the second time in history that an astronaut has celebrated the birth of a child while floating in outer space.

Tags: Marine



Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Obama's Foreign Policy Leaves Something - Anything - To Be Desired
Posted by: Townhall.com Staff at 10:12 AM
Here's Gabor Steingart, who was embedded with the President during his recent trip to Asia.
The mood in Obama's foreign policy team is tense following an extended Asia trip that produced no palpable results. The "first Pacific president," as Obama called himself, came as a friend and returned as a stranger. The Asians smiled but made no concessions.
There were no concessions on greenhouse gas emissions. Nothing on the intentionally weak Chinese currency. Not even a thing on human rights. Obama's handlers defended him, saying expectations were too high. But is one millimeter above "nothing" too much to expect?

Tags: obama



Wednesday, November 25, 2009
Support Our Troops Throughout the Holidays
Posted by: Townhall.com Staff at 7:00 AM
This holiday season, Townhall.com has partnered with Oliver North and the Freedom Alliance to thank American soldiers serving around the world. We hope you find this campaign meaningful and join us in support of our troops.

Click the image below to support our efforts!






Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Sesame Street's "Spill O'Reilly" Appears On Bill's O'Reilly Factor
Posted by: Greg Hengler at 9:51 PM
I really enjoyed this segment. Here ya go:






Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Forcing the Public to Use Bureaucratic Boondoggle
Posted by: Michael Medved at 4:33 PM
After 13 years of delays, and cost-overruns that tripled its estimated cost, Seattle finally finished the first 14 miles of its insanely impractical light rail system. Running between downtown and the airport, “Central Link” cost an unprecedented $330,000,000 per mile—nearly $200,000 per yard. Of course, ridership is barely half what officials predicted—and interest on construction expenses alone means a subsidy of $200 per ride.

My wife and I tried the new system, experiencing a jerky, pokey ride that took 45 minutes. Officials claim the normal time will be 36 minutes, but acknowledge that the popular 194 Bus travels the same route (at a lower fare) in just 32 minutes! To force the unwilling public to use the white elephant light rail, they’ve arrogantly announced cancellation of the 194 Bus, starting in February.




Tuesday, November 24, 2009
Mahmoud Ahmedinejad Gets Told Off
Posted by: Townhall.com Staff at 4:19 PM
Hats off to this lady:

Photobucket
Credit Pundit Kitchen





Tuesday, November 24, 2009
The Right Thing for the Wrong Reason
Posted by: Carol Platt Liebau at 4:03 PM
Howard Fineman -- long a fan of President Obama's -- points out that The White House isn't "the place to be" to the extent that the sense of America's power and prestige diminishes around the world.

Perhaps that fact can persuade the President to stop apologizing for his country, driving its economy into the ground and genuflecting to foreign leaders.  After all, if the United States is reduced in importance and authority, so is he, right?  And while it's beginning to seem as though the President isn't all that concerned with America's status, it does seem apparent that he takes his own most seriously.



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Comments Comments

matthew. I would like you to respond!
 Re: So Much for Transcending Race
  By arch
arch
 Re: So Much for Transcending Race
  By matthew
moderateGuy
 Re: So Much for Transcending Race
  By arch
Obama is a racist a#@#hole
 Re: So Much for Transcending Race
  By moderateGuy
Cotton Brilliant!!
 Re: Support Our Troops Throughout the Holidays
  By arch
KG
 Re: Support Our Troops Throughout the Holidays
  By arch
Grace
 Re: Christmas Outlawed
  By arch
grace
 Re: So Much for Transcending Race
  By arch
cotton: I quite agree
 Re: Support Our Troops Throughout the Holidays
  By K.G.
zeke proctor. ROTFLMAO!!!!!!
 Re: So Much for Transcending Race
  By arch
King of Election Fraud
 Re: Blackwell Calls for Gen. Casey to be Fired
  By grace
Here we go
 Re: Christmas Outlawed
  By grace
Carol's a poll watcher now?
 Re: So Much for Transcending Race
  By grace
They have only themselves to blame!
 Re: Christmas Outlawed
  By arch
b2slim and others
 Re: Beck's Message for Obama: Time to Get Your Priorities Straight
  By Patriotic Liberal
Liberals love to be deceived
 Re: Christmas Outlawed
  By davpatt3
NOTW
 Re: Christmas Outlawed
  By mike
mathew
 Re: So Much for Transcending Race
  By zeke proctor
matthew How do you figure?
 Re: Christmas Outlawed
  By arch
Obama brought out the inner racist
 Re: So Much for Transcending Race
  By matthew

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