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Thursday, December 06, 2007
Rebecca Hagelin :: Townhall.com Columnist
Compassion at Christmas
by Rebecca Hagelin
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It’s common, around this time of year, to hear people grumble about Christmas being “too commercial.” They have a point, of course. It’s easy to get so caught up in the buying frenzy that we forget why we celebrate Christmas in the first place. But let’s not sell ourselves short. The observance of Jesus’ birth also inspires countless acts of kindness and generosity.

In communities nationwide, Americans volunteer their time and talents to run food banks, clothing drives and other charitable activities. Working in many cases through churches and other faith-based groups, they reach out to those in need. And they do it in large numbers. As former Attorney General John Ashcroft once noted, for every federal worker in social services, six private individuals are working in communities on behalf of the needy.

There’s nothing new in this. Such selflessness has long been a part of the American character. Alexis de Tocqueville, the great French writer who toured America in the early 1800s, observed it firsthand. In Democracy in America, he wrote, “The Americans’ … regard for themselves, constantly prompts them to assist one another and inclines them willingly to sacrifice a portion of their time and property for the welfare of others.” Throughout most of our nation’s history, it has been not the government, but privately run hospitals, orphanages, missions, churches and civic groups that have assisted the destitute and the downtrodden.

Then, as now, Americans didn’t do it for pay. They did it because it’s the right thing to do, particularly as Dec. 25 approaches. As Scrooge’s nephew remarks in A Christmas Carol, “I have always thought of Christmas-time … as a good time; a kind, forgiving, charitable, pleasant time; the only time I know of, in the long calendar of the year, when men and women seem by one consent to open their shut-up hearts freely.”

The natural generosity of many Americans, in fact, makes them easy prey for reports over-hyping the extent of hunger in our country. The U.S. Department of Agriculture, for example, released its annual report on “food insecurity” last month, and most media immediately misreported it, claiming that about 35 million people suffered from hunger at some point in 2006. But as Robert Rector of The Heritage Foundation notes in a new paper, it’s important to take a closer look at the report.

When you do, you see that hunger and “food insecurity” aren’t exactly synonymous. The department’s report shows that only 4 percent of American households had to reduce their intake because of financial hardship for even one day in the year. And 1.4 percent of adults -- and fewer than one in 1,000 children -- went so much as one day between meals during all of 2006.

“What is rarely discussed,” Rector writes, “is that the government’s own data show that the overwhelming majority of food insecure adults are, like most adult Americans, overweight or obese. Among adult males experiencing food insecurity, fully 70 percent are overweight or obese. Nearly three-quarters of adult women experiencing food insecurity are either overweight or obese, and nearly half (45 percent) are obese. Virtually no food insecure adults are underweight.”

In another paper, Rector examines their diet: Continued...

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About The Author
Rebecca Hagelin is a public speaker on the family and culture and the author of the new best seller, 30 Ways in 30 Days to Save Your Family.
 
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Dignity
Yes, you are right, that is the one thing missing from most government "charity" and a lot of well-meaning private charity as well. I spent a summer living and working in an Appalachian community and having been taught that I do not know it all, was willing to take a good natured ribbing from people who found out how little a city girl knew about life in the country. I was the only one in the volunteer organization who lived in the community; the others came up for the day or on the weekends. The kind of assistance and suggestions some of these well meaning idiots put forth would have outraged me, but the village people said they heard it all the time and would even slyly set their would-be helpers up sometimes and then laugh about it after they were gone. The one thing that would outrage them was the suggestion that they were eligible for "programs" -- they guarded their independence fiercely and one had to be circumspect and humble in offering them anything. I finally stumbled across the answer: sisters and brothers can do what outsiders cannot. Because I was living among them and they had seen I was ready to learn, it was not so difficult to become "sister" and then I could give more easily. Throwing somebody a cheque disrespects their dignity and won't get you or them anywhere.

Jeanne-Marie
Diabetes is a condition fairly easy to cure and quite dangerous if you don't. There is a safe plant called "Suma" that has been used to cure diabetes in the past. You might want to get several months supply and give it a try on your ex-husband. Paradise Herbs brand is best and inexpensive at iherb.com on the Internet. I take it myself for another reason.

An excellent and probably the best approach to maintaining or regaining one's health can be found in Jordan Rubin's latest book, "The Maker's Diet." Get it for him, read it with him, and insist that he do it.

Another substance that could well be of help is something new and nearly miraculous called "Regenerate" from integratedhealth.com.

If he is over 40, he may need hormone therapy--testosterone supplementation, etc. Suma and Deer Antler Velvet might meet his need for testosterone and growth hormone if taken abundantly and in weekly rotation.

You might want to go to mercola.com, lef.com and newstarget.com and check out their archives on diabetes and any other diseases you have to deal with.

There is no good reason other than lack of knowlege to be in less than good or even excellent health if you're willing to make a serious, highly focused effort in that direction.

Were I his son, I would take dear ol' dad to a hospital to spend hours meeting diabetics who are blind, missing limbs, victims of stroke, heart attack, etc., to fully immerse him in the horrifying truth of what he is in for if he doesn't straighten up and fly right. Kind of like being dipped into hell for a gut-wrenching period of time.
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