Faith Under Fire

Faith, freedom No Comments

Gov. Bill Ritter is another one of those politicians no longer serving his constituents. It’s all about getting re-elected and sucking up to those anti-Christ activists who contribute the most coin to their campaign efforts. If you go to his web site you’ll see photos of the Gov. Bill Ritter signing legislation helping the boy scouts, people with developmental disabilities and Boys and Girls Clubs. These kids have no idea that this new bill could open them up to a whole new world of sexual predators in public restrooms. Way to go Gov’…you put the “core” in “corruption.”

From the fine folks at World Net Daily:

‘Religion in private’ OK, says ACLU
New limits on Christians leave family groups reeling


Colorado Knucklehead Gov. Bill Ritter

Colorado’s new state law that was based on the apparent belief that free speech rights are not unalienable and they sometimes must be restricted is scaring residents who now fear expressing their opinions in public.

WND has reported previously that the law, SB200, which was promoted as an “anti-discrimination” plan favoring alternative sexual lifestyles and gender perceptions, has made it a criminal offense to discriminate against someone based on those lifestyles or perceptions.

The Christian publishing house Focus on the Family has called it a payback by the Democrat-controlled legislature and Democratic Gov. Bill Ritter to homosexual activists such as millionaire Tim Gill, who has donated widely to pro-homosexual political candidates.

The Focus analysis of the plan, according to spokesman Bruce Hausknecht, shows that besides the obvious impacts of opening restrooms and locker rooms statewide to members of either sex, depending on a perception of their gender, “the biggest danger this law poses is to the religious or moral consciences of small business owners who may object to doing business with people whose lifestyle they do not want to promote.’

“Who would have believed that the Colorado state legislature and its governor would have made it fully legal for men to enter and use women’s restrooms and locker-room facilities without notice or explanation?” Focus founder James Dobson said. “Henceforth, every woman and little girl will have to fear that a predator, bisexual, cross-dresser or even a homosexual or heterosexual male might walk in and relieve himself in their presence.”

Other groups also have issued warnings.

Colorado Family Action wrote of the plan: “This bill lays groundwork for state-sanctioned abuse of individuals and organizations who have faithfully held religious convictions and refuse to offer or sell goods or services to homosexuals, bisexuals, transgendered, or transsexual individuals because of such beliefs.

“This desire to limit the constitutionally guaranteed right to the ‘free exercise of religion’ can be seen in Cathryn Hazouri’s, executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union, testimony given before the Colorado House Judiciary Committee,” the group said.

“One may practice one’s religion in private; however, once a religious person comes into the public arena, there are limitations in how the expression of their religion impacts others,” she had said.

Individual residents also now are beginning to realize the potential of the new law, which was approved by the legislature with a declaration that it is needed for “public safety” so it is not subject to any vote of the people.

“Now, as I stand outside of a movie theater bathroom or a swimming pool shower room door and guard the most precious thing in my life: my wife and daughter’s safety, modesty and privacy, I can no longer stop a man from entering a woman’s domain,” wrote a concern resident whose name was withheld. “(I will anyway, that’s why I’m a criminal!)”

“An act that once was criminal is now legitimate, and what was taught to me as a virtue is now a vice. Not only am I liable for civil penalties but criminal, as I can be sentenced for up to a year in jail,” he wrote.

“I immediately contacted my state representative, Wes McKinley, to ask him what his stand was on this bill. He proudly told me he supported it. I brought to his attention the recent case in New Mexico that was in national news. A photographer refused to photograph a lesbian ceremony. The lesbian couple found another photographer who would and then turned around and sued the Christian photographer for refusing. They won the suit and the photographer was fined over $6,000.00. I asked Rep. McKinley if he thought this was right. He told me no and assured me that wouldn’t happen with this bill,” the resident wrote.

“I then contacted my attorney who told me that SB200 does, indeed, open the door to this kind of litigation, and that I would have to be careful to not express my convictions in public in this kind of situation,” he wrote.

He also reacted to Hazouri’s comments, which were unchallenged by the state legislature.

She said, “You give up some of your rights when you go into the public square,” the resident said. “Wow, I didn’t know that. I was taught in school that these rights of free speech were ‘unalienable.’ Apparently, gay rights trump heterosexual rights, as well as the First Amendment.”

“So, as long as I keep my convictions to myself and only express them in my home or church, I’m legal. Somehow, I don’t think this is what the Bill of Rights meant,” he said.

“Will SB200 be the end of it? No. Next, hate crime legislation must be passed so that it is illegal for me to write this letter (as it is now illegal in Canada); then enforced homosexual/transsexual indoctrination of our children in the public educational system; finally, all other alternative forms of education must be outlawed. Impossible, you say? It’s already happened in California,” he said. “As I’m being forced into this ’shotgun wedding’ with the radical homosexual agenda, I hope it’s not too late to ’speak now, or forever hold my peace.’ What is it called when you are forced, against your will, to participate in a sexual lifestyle that you find objectionable? I believe that is called ‘rape.’ My state legislature has ‘violated’ me and charged me with the crime.”

Tom Minnery, the senior vice president of government and public policy for Focus, told the Denver Post there are “multiple problems” with the plan, “but the problem of restrooms is the most breathtaking one. … With SB200, however, we no longer have two ’sexes,’ we enter a brave new world with a myriad of ’sexual orientations’ that must not be discriminated against, upon pain of the substantial civil and criminal penalties contained in the bill.

“Woe to the first women’s fitness facility or mall owner who objects to a man dressed as a woman who wants to enter previously forbidden territory. And what an opportunity for sexual predators,” he wrote.

He said every Christian, Jewish or Muslim business owner now is under a threat.

“We’ve seen … charges brought by homosexuals against a video reproduction business in Virginia, a medical clinic in California, an adoption service in Arizona and a church in New Jersey,” he continued. “Colorado tops them all on the potential outrage meter, however, because in addition to civil fines and penalties, small-business owners can be prosecuted under the criminal laws of Colorado and spend up to one year in jail for trying to live according to their faith.”

There are other groups preparing for full-scale war in Colorado.

“American RTL [Right to Life] Action is a political 527 group headquartered a half-block from the Colorado capitol, and we’re not going to hire someone cohabitating outside of marriage, let alone a homosexual,” said Steve Curtis, the group’s president and former chairman of the Colorado Republican Party. “SB200 also makes it a crime for us to publish biblical teaching on immorality, so we are prepared to violate this anti-Christian government censorship. The liberals always said what homosexuals do in private could never affect anyone else; of course that was always a lie; they’re trying to criminalize traditional Christianity. The fight is on.”

© 2008 WorldNetDaily

A Posthumous Victory

2nd Amendment, Gay Marriage, Marriage, McCain, Obama No Comments

Podcast Show Notes

Charlton Heston fought long for freedom. Without his work at the NRA, we wouldn’t have justices Alito and Roberts. Today victory was won.

Plus the post-partisan candidate plans a partisan coup, while offering Americans a plan to make fossil fuels more expensive. (Hat Tip: The Campaign Spot.)

John McCain departs from the Kerry playbook and endorses the California marriage amendment.

Why can’t Johnny do math? Maybe, the teachers don’t know how to teach it. (Hat Tip: Right Mind.)

Canadian Private Schools produce better results than public schools.

The latest victim of political correctness: Father’s Day cards. (Hat Tip: Where Is Jodi?)

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Adolescence - A Failed Cultural Model

family No Comments

Voters Loose Cannon

Republicans No Comments

Podcast Show Notes 

Voters in Utah’s 3rd District send a clear message by voting out an out of touch incumbent by a 20 point margin.

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STOP THE UN-FAIRNESS DOCTRINE!

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Petition To Defend Conservative
Free Speech Over The Airwaves

Democrats in Congress have threatened to reinstate the so-called “Fairness Doctrine,” which would stifle the free-speech rights of conservatives by requiring stations to broadcast liberal viewpoints. Dr. James Dobson has called the Fairness Doctrine a “miserable failure” that “stifled speech which is guaranteed in the Constitution.”

Sign the petition

Send Me to Minneapolis: My First Bleg

Republicans No Comments

I’ve been invited to cover the Republican Convention in Minneapolis. It’s an honor to be invited and I would like to give you honest coverage from the Convention.

I want to bring you the type of coverage in Minneapolis that I brought to the Idaho Republican Convention.

 The good news is I can probably get away from work. The bad news: Going to a convention costs money and between our trip to the State Convention and an upcoming Writer’s Conference, money is a little tight.

Currently the best prices I can find on an airline ticket is about $450. Then there’s the matter of lodging. Many of the motels closest to the convention are already booked solid. So, if I’m going I need to get a hotel pronto. Between paying for the airline ticket, food, transportation to and from the convention hall, and incidentals, I’ll probably need $1000 for this little adventure. This isn’t a cost that Andrea and I can realistically afford.

So for the first time in 4 years of blogging, I’m going to ask for blog readers to consider sending money. I’m extremely reluctant to do this, but put simply it ain’t going to happen otherwise.

If you don’t send me money, I can’t tell you that children in Africa will die (because they won’t.) I can’t even tell you that your grandchildren will look at you with sad eyes and ask why you didn’t give me the money to go to the convention.

What I can tell you is that Idaho Conservatives need to move into the 21st century and into the new media particularly with Nancy Pelosi and her Socialist Posse (sounds like a alternative rock band doesn’t it?) seeking to re-institute the fairness doctrine. Pictures and sounds from the Convention as well as Idaho thoughts being liveblogged from Minneapolis could spur the growth of conservative new media in Idaho. And in no time, we can make Idaho’s blogosphere as red as Idaho itself.

If this sounds like a good idea, or even if it doesn’t but you’d like to see me go to the Convention (if for no other reason than getting me out of the state for a few days.) then click here to donate by Paypal via the account used by my wife and I’s business, King Kilts or send your payment directly to adam at adamsweb.us. If you’d rather send me a money order, e-mail me by using the contact form.

Thank you gifts:

Donations of $60 or more will receive a free copy of my book, “The Screwtape Reports.”

What If I Can’t Go:

If you would like your donation refunded if I don’t raise enough to go, simply click the “Add Special Instructions to This Order” on the paypal form and just type, “Refund, if can’t go” and should the fundraising drive fall short, I’ll gladly refund your money.

National Review Does Not Speak For Me

Huckabee 1 Comment

National Review is set this Friday to release the names of four people it views as unacceptable Vice-Presidential Candidates: Tom Ridge, Charlie Crist, Joe Lieberman, and Mike Huckabee, and frankly I could care less.

 

In December, I listened to and joined in the DC echo-chamber that slammed Mike Huckabee mercilessly. I fed on the constant negative drumbeat of National Review and their relentless assaults on Arkansas’ former Governor. I bought into it, I regurgitated it.

 

I never bothered to look into the facts, particularly in regards to the charges against Mike Huckabee’s fiscal record. If I had, I would have found out that he had two court rulings come out against his state that forced increases in Medicaid and Education, and that on top of that he faced a legislature that was at least 70% Democrat every year he was in office and could override his veto by a simple majority. I wonder which Huckabee critic could have done more for conservative values than Huckabee under those circumstances.

 

If this past election cycle taught us nothing, it taught us that bias exists in the conservative media. The one-sided attacks on Mike Huckabee last December were not only unfair, they allowed the rise of John McCain to the Republican nomination, as the National Review-anointed leader of the Conservative movement surrendered on February 7th after having won only one competitive primary.

 

Conservative defeat is the legacy of National Review in the 2008 campaign. Why bother listening to them? Last week, I did a podcast in which I began to talk about some of the activities of John McCain, the nominee that obsessive huckacritics pushed over the top by becoming the echo chamber of groups like National Review and the Club for Growth and I wept for what I helped to bring about.

 

I feel as Heritage Foundation Founder Paul Weyrich did when he rose to speak to the National Policy Council to confess, “Friends, before all of you and before Almighty God, I want to say I was wrong.”

 

Over the years, conservative magazines have ceased to speak to common people and explain how and why conservative ideas can make our country better. Instead, the magazines are full of intellectual navel-gazing that no one outside of the conservative movement cares one whit about.

 

They missed, as we all did, the grassroots movement that was Huck’s Army: thousands of grassroots activists producing miracle wins on little money. They missed the optimism and faith in America that Mike Huckabee exuded? Why? He graduated from school they never heard of, he was an Evangelical, came from the rural South, and didn’t embrace Darwinism as unalienable truth.

 

There is much of the establishment conservative movement that represents conservative beltway elitism. There time is ending.

 

There was a time when the New York Times was a Christian-owned newspaper that railed against the evils of abortion and even called it medical malpractice. There was a time when the motto of Harvard was, “For Christ and the church.”

 

These institutions have become shadows of their former selves, enemies of the causes for which they once existed, but truth lives on. It does not live in the hearts of the Wall Street crowd, beltway political manipulators, or self-righteous pundits, it lives in the hearts of people we never hear from at the national level.

 

They’re people who work hard, earning $12 an hour if that. They’re the people Barack Obama thinks cling to religion and guns out of bitterness. They’re the people that National Review thinks only refused to back Mitt Romney because of anti-Mormon bigotry. They’re people the left scoffs at for voting against their own economic interests.

 

But these people really believe in America, and that it’s a place where they can still make a better life for themselves and their children. They believe in a God who still governs in the affairs of men. These are the people who National Review disdains.

 

So, National Review can feel free to lump Mike Huckabee in with liberal Republicans like Tom Ridge and Charlie Crist, and even a Scoop Jackson Democrat like Joe Lieberman. But it is they who are missing the next great wave of conservatives. 

 

Beyond this dark moment in the history of American Conservatism, I see glimmers of hope in those who are heeding the challenge of Alex and Brett Harris to “do hard things.” I see it in people across this country who will bare the battle in the heat of the day for the good of their country. There is hope for our country. It just won’t be found in places you’d expect like the offices of National Review.  

Obama the Rock Star

2008 Race, Obama No Comments

Prepare yourselves for yet another cover of the Rolling Stone featuring Barack Obama. Apparently the rock star image is still lingering in the minds of some.

This time it’s just a simple picture of a smiling Obama. No clever words; no clouds surrounding him; no Christ like imagery. It’s just a simple picture.

The Audacity of Me Being President

On

“Just In” with Laura Ingraham

she says in the interview that Obama praises rap music for unifying the culture through music. He expresses his admiration for rapper Ludacris which just boggles the mind. I had to rewind that one to make sure I heard it right. After researching lyrics from rapper Ludacris I felt it irresponsible to post even the “censored” versions. They are simply too obscene and frankly too gansta, if you will!

I can’t imagine hearing the new version of “Hail To The Chief” we might be subjected to. This is who he admires? It’s Ludacris…uh, yeah, exactly. The White House will soon be on MTV Cribs.

Another thing I don’t get is the lapel pin. Oh, wait a minute, I get it. To appeal to the Patriotic voter, he’ll put one on. So if we question his judgment or character he’ll change his mind. Is he turning into a political puppet? With a little more persuasion we’ll have him on a trip to Iraq.

Nancy Pelosi says she admires his judgment. Was it good judgment to smoke weed or do “a little blow?” Maybe that’s why Obama is grinning in the photo. You’d have to be high to think you can be President with virtually no experience. After all, in the background it does say “Roll One.”

I know…I shouldn’t point out the speck in his eye. But really, please, what judgment is there to admire? He can’t grasp the simple economics of supply and demand. You admire his judgment? C’mon, don’t be such a Pelosi.

This is change we can’t afford.

Interview with Karen Holgate, Author of From Crayons to Condoms

Education, Faith, Marriage, family, freedom No Comments

Podcast Show Notes

I interviewed Karen Holgate, Author of From Crayons to Condoms and we discuss the problems in America’s public schools: Teachers as Amateur Psychologists messing with the minds of America’s youth, Self-esteem trumping academic achievement, death education, and what you can do about it.

Click here to listen, click here to download.

 

How Will the Scales Tip for You?

Faith No Comments

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