While Westerners tend to think that all religions encourage some form of the golden rule, Sharia teaches two systems of ethics - one for Muslims and another for non-Muslims. Building on tribal practices of the seventh century, Sharia encourages the side of humanity that wants to take from and subjugate others.
While Westerners tend to think in terms of religious people developing a personal understanding of and relationship with God, Sharia advocates executing people who ask difficult questions that could be interpreted as criticism.
* "
Nonie Darwish at Berkeley (oct. 22, 2007" collaborative (photo collage plus narrative) of a speech she held for "IFAW" (Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week) coverage more than entertaining, and shows some of the heckling and disruptions for her speech.
Nonie Darwish came out to give her speech. But before she could say even a single word... ..she was interrupted by abrasive protesters who screamed "Fascist! Fascist! Fascist!" at her and "You are nothing but a tool for the imperialism of the United States! You are here to spread racist filth on our Arab brothers and sisters!" The moment was captured in this outstanding video of the event put out by Incorrect University, starting at exactly six minutes into the 11-minute video. (And do watch the whole thing -- it's an excellent video report covering some of the same material in this photo essay.) As the video above showed, the interruptions were constant.
Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week" is a nationwide series of lectures and presentations organized by conservative writer David Horowitz and his various organizations. On the evening of October 22, dozens of famous speakers gave lectures at universities around the country, mostly on the subject of Islamic extremism. The presenter at U.C. Berkeley that evening was Nonie Darwish, an Arab-American author and feminist who has become a Muslim apostate and vociferous critic of radical Islam.
Her appearance at Cal was sponsored by the Berkeley College Republicans, and strongly opposed by several left-wing groups and Muslim organizations, including World Can't Wait, the Muslim Students Association, and Students for Justice in Palestine. Her speech was even condemned by the ASUC, the official student governing body at Berkeley
Phyllis Chesler (this link contains brief bio and is source of the photo below):
OK -- now I put my foot in it; I'm quoting Chesler (2011) about silence on violence towards Muslim women, including those seeking asylum and dissidents. I feel similarly about Christian silence towards Christian violence towards women; and although it's not this vicious -- dead is dead, and women have been beaten, killed and systematically dishonored/stigmatized over the matter of "family honor" in the United States, which is being done
through a different system (the family law system); this system is also abusive and extortionist towards men at many levels. (See other blogs).
In these several days of tangling with the theological (insanity) of mainstream evangelicals -- and this is an election year and election season -- which represents a re-engagement on my part (from being primarily political advocacy and tracking down grants & corporations that bribe the courts) --- I have not run across ONE "outreach to Islam" website which even mentions treatment of women and children in this realm.
It's not as though the three women above are unknown, or the issues unknown -- they are simply "unmentionables" in these communities, the evangelicals attempting to reach the world for Christ (without compromising their doctrine) and those attempting to be sensitive to Muslim issues and not overly dogmatic about preaching -- that Jesus was God, etc.
Well, I think they need to be brought together; and I do not know if at this point, believing in Jesus Christ as I (still) do -- I can legitimately afford to call myself a "Christian" if that's the definition and that's the history!
So -- here's what Phyllis had to say. I should acknowledge, though I've never met, I have brought this issue of concern about Christian fundamentalism going the shari'a way before to her attention, and particularly as it functions through the (now, unified) family court systems:
In the speech, delivered on International Women's Day, Chesler spared the audience the usual bromides (like those delivered by the first lady at the White House's commemoration event, which I wrote about
here), and explores two important questions: Are feminists doing enough to support women around the world-particularly in Muslim countries, and is fear trumping Western feminists concern for Muslim women's rights?
While I believe in cultural diversity, I am not a multi-cultural relativist. Therefore, I have taken a strong stand against the persecution of Muslim women and dissidents. Thus, I now submit expert courtroom affidavits on behalf of Muslim girls and women who have fled being honor murdered and are seeking asylum here.
Those of us who expose the plight of such women, and this includes Somali-born feminist hero Ayaan Hirsi Ali, as well as myself, have been demonized as "Islamophobes" and racists because we do not, in the same breath, blame America, the West, or Israel for their suffering.
In my view, western academic feminists, including gay liberationists, are so afraid of being condemned as "colonialists" or "racists" that this fear trumps their concern for women's rights in the Arab and Muslim world.
Chesler then lists some of the horrifying crimes committed against women in these Muslim countries. These crimes include normalized daughter- and wife-battering, forced veiling, female genital mutilation, polygamy, purdah, (the segregation or sequestration of women), arranged marriage, child marriage, first cousin marriage, acid attacks, public stonings, hangings, and beheading, and the further victimization of rape victims who are jailed, tortured, and executed.
Considering these truly gruesome crimes, Chesler excoriates mainstream feminists and the Muslim community for staying silent
All three of these women, which disturbs me, have gravitated towards conservative organizations.
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Here's from a website that has links to the Biblical Missology page (which is the tradename of the group protesting that Trinitarian Wycliffe Translations of FL was subject to an Insider Group in diluting the scriptures (as far as I could untangle the story, that is); I believe the link was through the author of a certain blog on the B.m. page, which led to this site:
Church Facing Global Challenge of Islam
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Rev. Bassam M. Madany
At the dawn of the Third Millennium, we need a new vision of world missions based on the solid foundation of the Word of God coupled with a realistic description of our times. We are living in a new era of world history. In the early days of modern missions, between 1800 and 1950, the West was more or less Christian, and its culture reflected the impact of the Christian tradition. “The mission fields” in Asia and Africa formed an integral part of the vast colonial empires of Britain, France, Germany, The Netherlands, Portugal and Spain. Not so today. The West is secularized, and those European empires are a thing of the past. Furthermore, Christian missions overseas should never be abstracted from what is going on in the homelands. Hence the critical importance of reaffirming the uniqueness and finality of the Christian faith in our missionary endeavors within the global scene and for the support groups in the West to be identifiably Christian.
The post-world-war II era has ushered in a new Diaspora that has brought millions of people from the former colonies to settle in Western European countries. And due to the changes in the immigration laws in Canada and the United States, the North American population is now more diversified than ever before. Such a mega shift in the global situation requires a re-examination of our mission strategies.
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(Paragraph after paragraph indicates an understanding that Islam is warlike in its conception, but apparently his main concern is missions and counter-evangelism -as Islam is evangelizing the West spontaneously - not the impact on home communities of a culture of violence. The recommended solution, unbelievably, is for Christians in the West to isolate them further from Western (secular) values to achieve a more Christian identity and restore credibility for -- I suppose, missions):
When we take these facts into account, we conclude that in planning for missions to Muslims in the 21stCentury, it becomes the responsibility of all Christians to fight tenaciously the steady advance of secularism into the various spheres of their life and communities. The credibility of the Christians’ missionary endeavors, at home within a pluralistic society, and overseas, depends on their distancing themselves from the norms and the lifestyles of the secular societies that surround them.
Why? Because unless they act more "Christian" no Muslim will consider Christianity (or "what it has to offer") seriously:
Unless Christians lead lives that are concretely different from the lifestyles of the secularized citizenry, no Muslim will consider seriously what Christianity has to offer. We have so much to learn from the history of the first three hundred years of the Christian era when to be a Christian meant both a marked separation from the corrupt heathen environment and, at the same time, engaging it with the bold Christian word-and-life testimony: Jesus is Lord.
Actually what "you-all" have to learn from the first three hundred years of the Christian era is, among other things, about One God, and other fundamentals of the Bible which were lost ca. 300 A.D. when, as you note, sir, it blended itself with the current power structure. Moreover, an honest history lesson (they are now available many places) would indeed acknowledge that this same Word of God was "locked up in Latin" for one thousand years (1,000) until primarily ONE man (Wycliffe) managed to get it into the current form of English, miraculously. For which, after his death, his own bones were dug up burned and scattered, and his books used to light another (Christian) martyr's flames for supporting him (Hus), and so forth. Something ain't right with that kind of "evangelism."
From
Jude (as in the last book in the Bible before "revelation" as canonized); the terminology is strong:
1Jude, the servant of Jesus Christ, and brother of James, to them that are sanctified by God the Father, and preserved in Jesus Christ, and called: 2Mercy unto you, and peace, and love, be multiplied.
3Beloved, when I gave all diligence to write unto you of the common salvation, it was needful for me to write unto you, and exhort you that ye should earnestly contend for the faith which was once delivered unto the saints. 4For there are certain men crept in unawares, who were before of old ordained to this condemnation, ungodly men, turning the grace of our God into lasciviousness, and denying the only Lord God, and our Lord Jesus Christ.
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then several sentences in which the word "ungodly" makes repeat appearances, and other vivid language describing those who "crept in unawares" and denying the only (ONE?) Lord God, and our Lord Jesus Christ (and I showed of the Lausanne document that it could barely spit out the word Jesus Christ 8 times (in 14 points) and with Lord attached, about 4 times -- none of them prominent. There is a problem with pronouncing that name in public, apparently. None of the original apostles, per what's in the book at least, suffered from this inability to say the words "Lord Jesus Christ" and talk about the resurrection..) Anyhow it then goes:
17But, beloved, remember ye the words which were spoken before of the apostles of our Lord Jesus Christ; 18How that they told you there should be mockers in the last time, who should walk after their own ungodly lusts. 19These be they who separate themselves, sensual, having not the Spirit. 20But ye, beloved, building up yourselves on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Ghost, 21Keep yourselves in the love of God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life.
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v. 18 "ungodly lusts" doesn't mean only sex (or that sex is bad). It's "ungodlinesses." Walking after their own (over)desires of ungodliness (plural, emphasizes the bigness of it). The word for desires (epithumia) is very strong word, it's not simply "desires" in English. It's close to the word for "wrath," or burning/boiling -- as I recall anyhow.
"Sensual, having not the Spirit" simply means "psuchikos" -- natural men (see I Cor 2 for "the natural man") -- meaning, they were not baptized in the name of Jesus, have not received the gift of the holy spirit, which is the unifying force among the church, the earnest (pledge) of the future inheritance (Eph 1:14, etc.) and everything it is alleged to be in the Bible:
The words "praying in holy spirit" (no "the" shows in the Greek) would've been understood
to the hearers, and is part of that common salvation, and what was first delivered, for which Jude exhorts they contend. It is a spiritual matter and has been addressed in words inspired by the spirit (which the Bible claims to be: "holy men of God spoke as they were inspired by the holy ghost.)and is nto rocket science to those who have received the spirit; it is foolishness to those who have not.
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So for the record, apparently this writer on the Global Challenge of Islam (meaning, to Christian missionary movement.....), not knowing better, or different, likes to talk about learning from the so-called dawn of the Christian era:
We have so much to learn from the history of the first three hundred years of the Christian era when to be a Christian meant both a marked separation from the corrupt heathen environment and, at the same time, engaging it with the bold Christian word-and-life testimony: Jesus is Lord.
What about: that God raised him from the dead, repent and believe on the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the holy ghost, for the promise is unto you, and your children, and all that are far off, as many as the Lord our God shall call? (Acts 2). . . And what about "save yourselves from this untoward (nasty) generation"? What about, God hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world by that MAN he hath appointed, Jesus Christ? If I can remember all that, how come a real missionary can't remember anything but Jesus is Lord which apparently (absent the resurrection) isn't even enough to get one "saved"??
And then, what about doing that?
I expect this is going to look exceptionally foolish, but once the words from scripture start resounding in one's soul and exposing other rhetoric -- and silence on the institutional actions -- they just make sense.
There was a sea-change ca. 300 A.D. Atheists know it, but Christians, while they know it, do not so acknowledge it as to realize THIS was about when debate was shut down (or attempted to be shut down) -- and rather than revelation from the One God, we -- and the world -- got indoctrination from the emperor-gods of this world, for which the Trinity was more acceptable, as the real Jesus as preached (along with the whole doctrine) would be an affront to their own kingship -- which talk was allegedly used against Jesus himself in getting him crucified.
In summary (after some more paragraphs comparing theologians on this matter of global islam, I take), here is the conclusion of the matter, on a respectable-looking website by a respected (at least by his peers and associates) reverend and writer, under a nice graphic of the world (see right above, here), about GLOBAL response:
Taking into account these insights and listening obediently to the teachings of the Word of God, we conclude that at this juncture in world history, global missions in general and missions to Muslims in particular, should be the concern of every church member. The old distinction between domestic and foreign missions is outdated. As noted at the beginning of my lecture, millions of Muslims and adherents of other world religions are now living in the West. Furthermore, a great number of Christians from America, Europe and the Pacific Rim are working in many parts of the Muslim world. They have ample opportunities for missionary activities not necessarily structured as in the past, but equally faithful to the mandate left for us by our victorious Lord.
Thus, as members of the Body of Christ, we must consider ourselves on active duty in the service of our Lord.
This goes without saying in the word "Lord" and says we live into him. It doesn't use the military draft terminology, "on active duty in the service of our Lord." Where, may I ask, did that come from, and look where he goes next about it - into missions. The guy should be a Mormon....
None of us should have the luxury of sitting back and simply supporting missions in a purely financial way.
It goes without saying that EVERy member of the body of Christ should be financially supporting missions -- even after repeated discoveries in the press that some of these missions (and/or orphanages, etc. -- like the one in Haiti recently) are instead abusing boys and young men from the street as part of the ministry. (Doug Perlitz, Fairfield University, Project Pierre-Toussaint, for which lawsuits have now been filed....)
While busy with missions within our own communities and country, we should ardently support those whom we have sent to distant lands, through our prayers, our generous gifts as well as by a consistently Christian lifestyle. We must not leave it to the Muslims among us to be busily engaged in “calling.” We have a great message to share with mankind.
DO YOU? What's that message?
And if we, Western Christians, shirk our missionary responsibility, Christians from Africa, Asia and Latin America will accomplish what God had ordained from all eternity.
Unbelievable logic. He must have totally skipped the first few chapters of I Corinthians, where Paul wrote: "I have planted, Apollos watered, but God gave the increase." Basically, he is advocating for competition with Muslims (who are more evangelistic without being so structured about it) and Christians in other parts of the world who are accomplishing what God ordained for all eternity. . . .I gather he probably is thinking "the Great Commission." What is that -- jealousy? Competition?
It's all sense-knowledge, not spiritual. Jude was right.
And where is even a hint of a breath of indignation about what is being done to women -- wives, mothers, daughters, sisters, aunts -- by both religions?
Go back and read the link to Dr. Chesler's table of honor killings in the US, and ask yourself why Hirsi Ali became an atheist. . . . .
What if Trayvon looked like my son or your daughter? Would the American President take such an immediate and personal interest in the matter?
Does Obama only spontaneously weigh-in when the victims are African-American boys and men? He certainly jumped right in when his friend and former Harvard colleague, African-American Henry Louis Gates, the Director of the W.E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research, had an altercation with Caucasian Sgt. James Crowley. Obama invited them both to the White House for a beer.
Perhaps I’m wrong, but Obama has not interjected himself so publicly when an individual woman of any color was battered, murdered, or honor killed in America.
I don't know. I'd say, probably not. For example, August 10, 2010 [Julie Marsh], Christian Science Monitor (not that I don't already follow a lot of this funding):
Russell White (second from l.) and others at the Center for Urban Families in Baltimore July 14. The program aims to help men become better fathers and succeed in the workplace. Marriage-education advocates worry that such programs cut into their funding.
Melanie Stetson Freeman/Staff
The apparent shift from a marriage to a fatherhood emphasis can be seen in the funding philosophies of the two administrations.
The Bush administration's family funding included dedicated line items in the budget – $100 million a year for marriage and $50 million annually for fatherhood. President Obama's new fund, which has yet to be approved by Congress, takes a different tack: It splits $500 million into two equal pieces that states deliver to local organizations. One piece is for "comprehensive responsible fatherhood programs – including those with a marriage component," and the other is to improve the lives of children by helping their parents get jobs.
To be sure, the Obama administration believes that marriage is important, says Jesse Moore, a spokesman for the Administration for Children and Families, the agency within the Department of Health and Human Services that will administer the new {{as of 2010}} fund. But at the same time, the fund reflects the fact that "children live in a wide range of family structures and there are many different ways that fathers can engage in the lives of their children," he says.
Fatherhood has been a recurring theme of the Obama administration. Shortly after his inauguration, Mr. Obama established a Fatherhood and Healthy Families Taskforce. He called the high rate of absent fathers in African-American communities "a real crisis." In June, Obama launched a Fatherhood and Mentoring Initiative.
While I'm here, let me bring this back round to the FAITH FACTOR, which is where it came from, a brief recap:
- 1994 (National Fatherhood Initiative nonprofit formed, with HHS grant helping out, and in part in response to the Violence Against Women Act (same year) and feminism in general. A lot of feminism, it turns out, has to do with women staying alive.
- 1995 (then-President Clinton issue "Fatherhood Memo",
- 1996 (Welfare reform block grants to states allows states to divert funds for hungry children or needy families into fatherhood/marriage promotion & access/visitation grants aimed at the family courts),
- 1998/1999 (both houses of US Congress pass "fatherhood" resolutions, and -- setting an example -- the state of Oklahoma nabs welfare contingency funds to run a STATEWIDE marriage promotion project (basically enriching the people running the programs); meanwhile in Los Angeles, an anti-trust taxpayer advocate attorney (Richard Fine) discovers approximately $14 million of money collected in the form of child support -- wasn't reaching the intended recipients, the kids. Marv Byer (a grandfather) also appears to discover an L.A. County Judges Slush fund which later morphs (it appears) into what we now know as the family law system run by "AFCC." (See my other blogs; I'm a veteran of the hallways....)
- Speaking of Mr. Fine, For his efforts in a class action? suit (Silva v. Garcetti) over this and for opposition to other bribery schemes in Los Angeles, Fine is eventually targeted by most of California's government (especially judges, the state bar, real estate developers, as an obstruction to business as usual) and gets disbarred, loses many of attorneys' fees he won and was tossed in solitary confinement. For 18 months; as I recall he was eventually released on Yom Kippur.
- Also for his efforts, many "domestic violence advocates" turned a deaf, dumb, and blind response to this very relevant factor, not to mention, also to the fatherhood funding, which some of the larger coalitions and groups ("endabuse.org") were, ah, in on.
- 2000 -- in 2000 three groups got together (I think it was at Chicago Div School), including "Smartmarriages.com" originator (i.e., "relationship education" conferences run in D.C. for about the next 10 years), and David Blankenhorn, either "Institute for American Values" or "American Enterprise Institute" (they are beginning to blur, to tell the truth) and signed a "MARRIAGE COVENANT," i.e., to promote it.
- 2000 also -- somehow -- George W. Bush, in a disputed in Florida (where his brother JEB was Gov) election -- somehow became President of the United States. Obviously USA presidential elections are in November.
- JANUARY 29, 2001 -- the FIRST two Executive Orders by GWB were to set up the Office(s) of Faith-based and Community Initiatives (see exact titles elsewhere) which became centers for steering grants to either religious organizations that promised not to evangelize while promoting marriage and fatherhood, or quickly set up a shell corporation (which I found out the American public through HHS grants) of some sort to get the grants.
- WHICH BRINGS ME TO OBAMA and the rest of the 2010 CSMonitor article. Just for the record, in 2010 (under a different name) welfare was again reauthorized in the "block grants to states" form with, oh, perhaps $150 million or so for this topic (Designer Families/promoting marriage, etc.). . . . . . And in 2011 another round of grants. AND IT'S UP AGAIN THIS SEPTEMBER 2012 -- PLEASE STOP IT!
I know this stuff like I know the books of the Bible (OK, not quite that well) and I know it experientially. But I DID NOT know about it going into the court system because it was intentially concealed from mothers (by the courts, the funders AND the domestic violence outfits that sometimes helped jumpstart the jump to safety for such mothers).
CSmonitor of 8/10/2010 continues to talk about the faith-based office and the horrors of fatherless children and single mother raising their kids. This goes on despite Obama having been raised by one himself:
Religion and Politics are NOT separate in America, and for this reason, No, I do NOT recall having heard President Obama stepped in, in outrage, to protest an honor killing. In fact, while many murders and horrors are directly attributed to families themselves, including some that want shari'a law in the United States, and some Protestants such as the kind that were clueless that wife-beating in their ranks is indeed at least nominally criminal (and are still all-but-silent on it), here we are: USA 2010:
When Congress passed welfare reform in 1996, a section of the law directed that funds go to the "formation and maintenance of two-parent families." This section opened the door to federal funding for programs that support and encourage marriage.
Since then, presidents {{plural}} have cited the same dire statistics surrounding single-parent households: One in 3 children in America lives in a fatherless household, and these children are likelier to be poor, abuse drugs, and become teen parents.
No matter that since 1996, the policy has been, women are not allowed to actually leave the relationship with their ex, as the courts will keep them joined at the hip for years, if necessary (there being financial incentives to do so).
For example, take my case. I got off welfare immediately after a violent relationship, thanks in part to a restraining order -- the first real restraint that had happened towards this violence in nearly a decade, which marked what my kids grew up witnessing. I would've made it too, except that WHAM, here comes the custody case -- off goes safety, on goes regular interaction with someone who'd threatened to kill me. Instead, he settled for long-term punishment (including basically getting out of supporting his own family by finding others to do so) by taking the kids overnight, which was -- of course -- a "family dispute." Female family members, and female judges, attorneys, and custody evaluators also profit from "dissing" the single parent family, not taking into account how theocratic America has become.
Many of the men doing these things are middle aged Caucasian men (not to mention the ones in US Congress!, probably are feeling their superiority and entitlement (as such) is at risk, while other honest working men are ALSO negatively affected by the same system --as it's draining their wages and sets up another system of oppression, plus social services for all the cases it creates needlessly. Women-- who are natural networkers when allowed to-- are mistrusted in network with each other not headed up by a man and so collectively attacked through BOth government and church. While those in the US who haven't been targeted by this still apparently believe all's well because there's NOW and there are domestic violence organizations.
To those (probably because they are themselves working and/or generally speaking honest) who do not realize how the system is presently tweaked, the talk about "fatherless children" households and single mothers being a burden to society may make sense. . . . What I have been at times trying to communicate to the "all's well in USA" people is that it's not, and that by combining gay with women's rights, this has brought down the wrath of the religionists on straight AND gay women and in particular mothers. . . . .
That in part is what led me back to address this "JesusLordChrist" topic again. For one -- God being real, and most governmental protections being a thing of the past, I need the help!
For another -- as someone who thinks the Bible is a fantastic and remarkable book, and who still believes in the power of God (a sense of NOT being alone in this world) -- I'd like to really set the record straight. What is though of as Christian, may be "Christian" -- but it's not what the Bible -- ANY of it except later interpolations (I mean, especially 300ADff) says, means, or recommends.
This next segment, finally -- of the same article, reference a group whose records (and transformations of corporate status) I have actually studied, quite a bit (see "
http:/familycourtmatters.wordpress.com" and I'd like to make a few points about it, after:
"Now, groups concerned about the Obama approach are pressing members of Congress to create a dedicated portion of funds that would go to marriage education.
"The California Healthy Marriages Coalition is one group calling for this. The coalition provides marriage- and relationship-education funding to organizations throughout the state. It received almost $12 million over five years from the Bush administration's Healthy Marriage fund.
"But the group would be fortunate to get $1 million from the new fund, says Dennis Stoica, the coalition's president. He argues that the language in the proposed budget, placing marriage as a "component" of comprehensive responsible-fatherhood programs, favors fatherhood. The multifaceted nature of the funds would crowd out marriage, he adds. "For us, it's this tremendous shift," Mr. Stoica says."
Yeah, right. That's quite the story -- and like Jesus Christ Lord really IS the key to understanding the scriptures (I still believe), this particular group was a key to my understanding the marriage/fatherhood grants, and why leaving a violent marriage felt like attempting to detach from a cult. I literally was reading books like "Infidel" and wondering why they so spoke to me, when my profile is nothing like the author's.
1. CHMC is (or was?) a faith-based coalition whose stated goal was to get marriage education to virtually every fertile (like 15 or over) California in the state. Such global thinking is worthy of nice big rewards, and they got about $11 million, then the largest around (from 2006 forward). The history of their incorporation is fascinating. A related one (with some overlapping personnel) in Northern California, closer to or in Sacramento; this one is in San Diego area, or was.
2. While I can't say it's a "took the money and run" outfit (others, I can say this of with more authority), several corporations with Mr. Stoica's name on it were suspended or dissolved by (my illustrious Western state) and he & others then formed a group in Florida called "NARME" (National Association for Relationship & Marriage Education") whose membership, notably, included other grantees (some of who had similar problems staying, er, "incorporated), the primary theme being, how to get a head start on getting them marriage & fatherhood grants. A certain guy who was working (for, like 10 years?) in HHS as Special Marriage Assistant (or such), Bill Coffin, worked with them to help get the grants, and then retired to head up another grantee, I think it was called IDEALS (also HHS funded). Getting the picture yet?). All this can be traced on the internet, it just takes a little time.
3. To top it off, one of the marriage educators in CHMC (Bento Leal) happened to be a man intensely involved with the UNIFICATION church, and probably not the only one. Apparently our very smart Christians who want to reach the world about the greatness of marriage, have an allegiance to a certain well-known couple who call themselves, or are called by others, the "True Parents." (Rev. Sun Myung Moon and his mother). And that story is over at the other blog (and probably cost me a few associates in the on-line support groups, BUT, my facts were right. )
Which brings me to the question -- WHY would the religious right and the liberal left** BOTH be so enamoured of this particular couple -- known for an intent to form a global religion with them at the top, also known for tax evasion and money-laundering and a few other REALLY not so nice activities, some of them in association with a former US President (Bush)?
(*Is not Congressman Danny K. Davis of IL a Democrat? -- he carried the crown for Sun Myung Moon in a US Senate building in (i think it was) 2004 -- for a mock? ceremony with this couple, and was also a sponsor of yet another fatherhood bill in 2010.)
And WHY do women has to stand so alone when addressing these things, almost no matter what country they do it from? Whether sounding the alarm about failure to sound the alarm VIS A VIS women & kids over "the global challenge of Islam" -- or the evangelists who have forgotten, in practice, the Bible which says God is no respecter of persons -- and that includes gender, when it comes to Christ?
I mean no disrespect, but I think that in general, it's actually men who are the real herd animals (and herders), whether it comes to sheep, harems, or armies. Organize the thing and give it a name, then reap the profits. I think that women, having been for centuries in charge of small children, simply have to be able to pay attention to a LOT of detail and the vulnerable ones, plus for Pete's sake, we also still nurse kids, when allowed to. Man's solution is to put everyone in school (the earlier the better), and feed'em milk, put the Moms to work, and teach the fathers how to be more nurturing. Sure. . . .
[[Well, THAT was off-topic, some, but it's my blog, after all!]]
When the authors of the Democratic Party’s platform’s sections dealing with the Middle East—I dealt with the section on Israel in a previous article—finished it, they were no doubt quite satisfied. They felt that they had built a strong case for reelecting President Barack Obama along the following lines:
America is more secure and popular. Al-Qaeda and the Taliban are on the run. The wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are ending. America is supporting democracy, women’s rights, and gay rights around the world. Isn’t this great leadership? How could anyone not vote for Obama?
When I read the platform I am shocked and disappointed. I can pick a bit at the issues of popularity, Afghanistan, and Iraq. But the failure to deal with revolutionary Islamism is ridiculously glaring — they didn’t use the tiniest fig leaf to cover themselves — making a mockery of the democracy and human rights pretensions.
If they don’t even see the main threat at all, how can one trust such people to rule the country and provide leadership in the region?
(**a woman from "Americans for Peace Now" badmouthing the IDF (Israeli Defense League) who apparently thought Zimmerman, the shooter, was Jewish)*
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