Trump is a Lot Like LBJ Who Liberals Still Idolize

AUSTIN, TX (John Fund, National Review Magazine. Click to read the whole story, here is an excerpt) Johnson was reckless, grandiose, and intimidating, but he got things done, with the help of the

History Channel Photo

History Channel Photo

GOP. As president, he cut a grandiose figure. He was a braggart and a frequent liar. He was suspicious of other countries, frequently saying, “Foreigners are not like the folks I am used to.” He had a reckless disregard for limits. He belittled and browbeat others to intimidate them and give him what he wanted. Historian Robert Dallek said that he “viewed criticism of his policies as personal attacks” and opponents of his policies “as disloyal to him and the country.” He would bully and insult reporters, saying of one that he “always knew when he was around, because he could smell him.” He told whoppers about voter fraud in his elections. But he did get things done, dominating the political scene for good and for ill.

When God is in the Classroom

educationNOTE; This has been circulating around Facebook today. It is from a teacher’s blog named Mrs. Ackley. Here is an exerpt. Click to read the full article. -sd I’ve heard it said in various ways, “They have taken God out of the classroom.” I’ve even been asked, “How can you work in a public school when you can’t share your faith with the kids?” I’ve watched teachers walk away from public education with great frustration because of politics, evaluation systems, state standards, pay, and lack of support. If I am being honest, there are days in which I ask, “Why am I still here?” Yet, every time I ask myself that question, I hear a soft whisper in my soul… “Because I am here.” God is in your classroom.

Major media remain in denial

Image from Kassander.com

Image from Kasserver.com

By Cal Thomas Tribune Content Agency (Click on the link to read the full story.-Here is an excerpt) Since Donald Trump’s election, the major media have been trying to figure out what they did wrong, given their fawning coverage of Hillary Clinton and their anti-Donald Trump stories. Didn’t they help twice elect Barack Obama? Why didn’t the formula work this time? Mostly the media blame voters, talk radio and Fox News, never themselves. One might say they are in denial, a condition that has a medical definition. The psychologywikia.com defines it: “Denial is a defense mechanism postulated by Sigmund Freud, in which a person is faced with a fact that is too uncomfortable to accept and rejects it instead, insisting that it is not true despite what may be overwhelming evidence.” While the major media seek to apply that definition to President Trump — Scott Pelley opened a recent broadcast of the “CBS Evening News” claiming that the president’s statement Monday about unreported terrorist attacks were part of a growing list of comments that prove he is “divorced from reality” — they ought to spend some time looking in the mirror.

It’s Not What You Say; It’s How You Say It

Mona CharenPlease click on this link to read Mona Charen’s weekly coulmn. Here is an excerpt…. On Feb. 9, 1950, at a speech before the Ohio County Women’s Republican Club in Wheeling, West Virginia, Sen. Joe McCarthy brandished a piece of paper. “I have here in my hand a list of 205 … known to the secretary of state as being members of the Communist Party and who nevertheless are still working and shaping the policy of the State Department.” But McCarthy never released the names he supposedly had, and changed his story in the days and weeks that followed about exactly how many known communists there were in the State Department. McCarthy’s irresponsible grandstanding eventually got him censured by the Senate and contributed tremendously to discrediting the whole cause of anti-communism.

Franklin Graham’s Interview with the Huffington Post

Franklin Graham, head of international relief organization Samaritan's Purse, visits one of the organization's cholera treatment centers in the Cite Soleil neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, January 8, 2011. REUTERS/Allison Shelley (HAITI - Tags: SOCIETY HEALTH)

Franklin Graham, head of international relief organization Samaritan’s Purse, visits one of the organization’s cholera treatment centers in the Cite Soleil neighborhood of Port-au-Prince, January 8, 2011. REUTERS/Allison Shelley (HAITI – Tags: SOCIETY HEALTH)

NOTE – This interview has been talked about on social media as well has been a topic on debate shows over the last few days. Please click to read the entire interview for yourself from the Huffington Post. Here is an excerpt- “It’s not a biblical command for the country to let everyone in who wants to come, that’s not a Bible issue,” Graham told HuffPost. “We want to love people, we want to be kind to people, we want to be considerate, but we have a country and a country should have order and there are laws that relate to immigration and I think we should follow those laws. Because of the dangers we see today in this world, we need to be very careful.” …

Trump’s foreign policy revolution -Charles Krauthammer

charles krauthammerHere is an excerpt from Charles Krauthammer’s weekly Editorial in the Washington Post. Please click to read the entire column.  The flurry of bold executive orders and of highly provocative Cabinet nominations (such as a secretary of education who actually believes in school choice) has been encouraging to conservative skeptics of Donald Trump. But it shouldn’t erase the troubling memory of one major element of Trump’s inaugural address. The foreign policy section has received far less attention than so revolutionary a declaration deserved. It radically redefined the American national interest as understood since World War II. Trump outlined a world in which foreign relations are collapsed into a zero-sum game. They gain, we lose. As in: “For many decades, we’ve enriched foreign industry at the expense of American industry; subsidized the armies of other countries” while depleting our own.

Boys High School Basketball Crowds are like the 80’s

by Steve Dunford- franklincounty-news.com

About five years ago, there was something that started to bother me.  You did not see the big crowds at high school games.  Living in Sesser at the time, it was jammed packed at Sesser-Valier.  It was in the middle of their post season runs, finishing second in Class 1A in 2010.

Becasue of health, there was one year I did not darken the door of a high school basketball gym.  It was also the year that video streaming came about.  I watched a lot of games from Goreville, on blackcatsnetwork.com, and I became very familiar with the Hamilton County Foxes on FoxesFans.net. I spent a lot of time listening to games on the radio and audio streaming.

There was a sellout crowd at Benton High school this week in the BIT for the Pinckneyville/Benton game, as Pinckneyville is ranked 7th in the state in class 2A and Benton is 6th in class 3A in the AP Statewide Poll this week.  Benton had a big lead in that game and Pinckneyville made a huge comeback.  Benton ended up holding them off 52-42 to run the table in the BIT at 5-0 benton-rangers

I have heard several people mention it reminded them of the epic battle in 1984 between Benton and McLeansboro.  I was in the 8th grade, and I was there that night.  Every crook and cranny was filled that night in Rich Herrin Gym.

David Lee’s Foxes were state champs in Class A that year, going undefeated.  Rich Herrin’s Benton Rangers were Class AA that year, by about 20 students.  With an enrollment barely over 700, the Rangers gave Evanston, a school over 3,000, all they wanted in the quarterfinals of the AA state tournament losing in overtime.

Being a 14 year old kid I loved the Foxes and Rangers.  Jerry Warren was my Social Studies teacher and Basketball Coach during that era.  We would get him off subject talking about the Foxes and get out of work some days.  The rides home from basketball games were about the Foxes.  We even stayed in a classroom after a ball game at Logan (they did not have locker rooms) listening to the game with Evansville Bosse.  The bus driver, as well as the cheerleaders, and a few parents. gathered around this new fandangled invention called a boom box.

I loved the Rangers too during that era.  I asked my mom and dad for a Foxes hoodie and a stitched Rangers jacket from the defunct Hub store in Benton.  My brother beat me up and asked where my Tiger Pride was.  He was right, and I had received a stitched Thompsonville Tiger jacket for Christmas.

The 1980’s was the golden era of High School  Basketball in Southern Illinois.  There were a slew of Division 1 Basketball players throughout that era and a lot of them are coaching.  Several came from Franklin County.  There are over a dozen that came to mind across , but I am afraid I will miss one.

It seems like the D1 players have slowed down.  SIU has always had a guard that came from Southern Illinois.  First was Carterville Coach Shane Hawkins, then Missouri State coach Kent Williams, and now Tyler Smithpeters.

I don’t see a Division One basketball player coming out of Southern Illinois,  but a lot of kids that can play at the Division II or III level or in the NAIA.

The crowds are though like the ’80s.  When I was at the Christopher Turkey Tournament, fans began to file in during the consolation championship game between Thompsonville and Z-R.  It would take a shoe horn to fit one more person in “The Cave” in Christopher, which I think should be named Tom Wheeler gymnasium.

There were great crowds at all the Thanksgiving tournaments and Holiday Tournaments this year. I was not able to attend any this year, but the attendance at Sesser-Valier and Pinckneyville was outstanding from what I hear.  I watched a lot of the Eldorado Holiday Tournament on Foxes Fans. net and the crowds were outstanding as well.  There were even decent crowds at the 8:30 a.m. breakfast special and the 10:00 midnight special.

I either watched all or parts of games but two from the Midwinter classic.  Like at Benton, the student sections were great, especially Marion and Herrin.

Several regular season games, especially against rivalry schools are well attended.

I was watching the Marion/Herrin game with my son at the top level chair seats in Max Morris gym.  He asked if all 3A games were like this, with the kids getting into and more physical that the BDC West. I said yes the game is more physical, but the student sections were awesome.

Several have enlisted me in the Big Red Army and, I am not getting onto the students, but here are some things to consider.  I want to compliment you on your big turnout against Eldorado.  The Redbirds played their guts out against the Class 3A team in the state.  Most of you were incognito against Herrin.  I also want you to consider this, chanting “Bull Ship” at the officials when you don’t  sounds like something else.  It does not look good.wf-redbirds

I am going to gripe at you about something else.  The student section was empty against the West Frankfort, Herrin game.  Shame on you.

Yes, there was a good crowd though.  Most of the fans from Sesser-Valier hung around and there was a good crowd for the game though.  Not only Pitchfork Nation support their Devils, they are basketball fans in general.

I am issuing a challenge tonight.  I would love to see that student section full tonight.  The Redbirds will be playing that maroon team six miles to the north tonight.  I would love to see a loud student section filled with red on one side and maroon on the other.

Listen, it is Benton and West Frankfort.  I have always said that if there is two tom cats one from Benton, and one from West Frankfort, fighting in 18 bottoms it would draw a crowd.  The girls play hard, and deserve your support.  I will be an impartial bystander, as I cover both teams.  Please come out. and see a good girls high school basketball game.

If you cant make it to Max Morris gym, tune in to Q 106 and listen to Jim Muir and Michael Marlo.

I don’t preach much anymore but I was a long winded preacher.  I have turned into a long winded writer.  I try to keep it around 500-750 words.  I am at 1120.  Bear with me, I am trying to get better at cutting it down.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

This government office is trying to shut down nasty and naughty names

The Asian rock band "The Slants" that is mentioned in the editorial (Washington Post photo)

The Asian rock band “The Slants” that is mentioned in the editorial (Washington Post photo)

In 1929, Chief Justice William Howard Taft persuaded Congress to finance construction of “a building of dignity and importance” for the Supreme Court. He could not have imagined what the court will ponder during oral arguments this Wednesday. The case concerns the name of an Asian American rock band: The Slants. And surely Taft never read a friend-of-the-court brief as amusing as one filed in this case. It is titled “Brief of the Cato Institute and a Basket of Deplorable People and Organizations.” The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office is empowered, by the “disparagement clause” of a 1946 law, to protect American sensitivities by denying trademark protection to “immoral, deceptive or scandalous” trademarks. These have included those that a substantial portion of a particular group perceives as disparaging that group — an ethnic, religious, national or other cohort. The office has canceled the trademark registrations of entities named Mormon Whiskey, Abort the Republicans, Democrats Shouldn’t Breed, Marriage Is For Fags, and many more. Please click to read George Will’s weekly editorial in the Washington Post

Resolve (Isaiah 50:7) from SIFCA director Roger Lipe

fcaHave you ever known a competitor who seems to have an unbending will to win?  One he set his mind on his goal, he would not waiver from it for anything.  Perhaps you’re like that.  Many of the greatest competitors are.
In Isaiah’s book of prophecy at chapter 50 and verse 5 we read about such an attitude of resolve, “Because the Sovereign Lord helps me, I will not be disgraced.  Therefore have I set my face like a flint, and I know I will not be put to shame.”
Some of us are so committed to our goals that, on game day, our faces look like they’re carved out of stone.  Our resolve is so strong that we’re unfazed by outside noises or distractions.
Though he was exposed to possible disgrace and shame, Isaiah pressed on in the pursuit of his goals.  He did so because he had a profound trust in God and sensed His help day to day.
As you compete today and as you press toward the completion of this season, set your face like a flint.  Focus strongly on your team’s goals and let nothing deter you from their fulfillment.  Trust in your teammates, your coaching staff and ultimately in your God to help you in this marvelous pursuit.

Cold War relic, present day threat

charles-krauthammerYou can kick the can down the road, but when Kim Jong Un announces, as he did last Sunday, that “we have reached the final stage in preparations to test-launch an intercontinental ballistic rocket,” you are reaching the end of that road. Since the early 1990s, we have offered every kind of inducement to get North Korea to give up its nuclear program. All failed miserably. Pyongyang managed to extort money, food, oil and commercial nuclear reactors in exchange. But it was all a swindle. North Korea was never going to give up its nukes because it sees them as the ultimate guarantee of regime survival. The North Koreans believe that nukes confer inviolability. Saddam Hussein was invaded and deposed before he could acquire them. Kim won’t let that happen to him. That’s why Thae Yong Ho, a recent high-level defector, insisted that “As long as Kim Jong Un is in power, North Korea will never give up its nuclear weapons, even if it’s offered $1 trillion or $10 trillion in rewards.” Please click to read Charles Krauthammer’s weekly column for the Washington Post.

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