Monthly Archives: September 2013

Tom Osborne at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 8

Tom Osborne at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 8

Tom Osborne on ESPN Up Close ~1998 Pt2

Uploaded on Sep 26, 2006

Interview with Tom Osborne on his career coaching the Nebraska Cornhuskers (2/2)

___________

I really enjoyed the speech that Tom Osborne made on 9-9-13 at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. He noted that at the beginning of his head coaching career that he went 10-1 several years in a row but he did not beat Oklahoma the first 5 years he was there and the fans were upset. However, it was noted that the last 5 years he was there he went 60-3 and won three national championships. His last game was in January of 1998 and it was for the national championship against Tennessee and their great quarterback Peyton Manning.

1998 Orange Bowl

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1998 FedEx Orange Bowl
National Championship Game
1 2 3 4 Total
Tennessee 0 3 6 8 17
Nebraska 7 7 21 7 42
Date January 2, 1998
Season 1997
Stadium Pro Player Stadium
Location Miami Gardens, Florida
MVP Nebraska RB Ahman Green
Referee Terry McAulay (Atlantic Coast Conference)
Attendance 74,002
United States TV coverage
Network CBS
Announcers: Sean McDonough and Terry Donahue
Nielsen ratings 13.3
Orange Bowl

 < 1996 (Dec) 1999 >

The 1998 Orange Bowl a 1997-1998 Bowl Alliance game was played on January 2, 1998. This 64th edition to the Orange Bowl featured the Nebraska Cornhuskers, and the Tennessee Volunteers. Tennessee came into the game with an 11-1 record and #3 AP ranking, whereas Nebraska came into the game with a 12-0 and #2 AP ranking.

Nebraska opened up a 7-0 lead after 1 quarter, and 14-3 lead after 2. Nebraska immediately put the game away 10 minutes into the fourth quarter, through a power running game. Nebraska’s lead jumped to 28-3. Quarterback Peyton Manning fired a 5-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Peerless Price to cut the lead to 28-9. The ensuing two-point conversion failed and the lead remained at 19.

Nebraska drove 59 yards in 3 plays, before running back Ahman Green later scored on a 22-yard touchdown run to move the lead back up to 35-9. Quarterback Scott Frost later added a 9-yard touchdown run to put the game away for Nebraska. Back-up quarterback Tee Martin threw a touchdown pass in the final minutes, and the ensuing two-point conversion was successful, making the final margin 42-17.

Nebraska’s running back Ahman Green was named game MVP after rushing for an Orange Bowl record 201 yards, and two touchdowns. Peyton Manning’s final game at Tennessee capped a brilliant college career, completing 21-of-31 attempts for only 131 yards passing. The game was also the last for Nebraska head coach Tom Osborne who had been at the helm since 1973.

Aftermath

Nebraska won the National Championship, capturing the number 1 spot in the Coaches Poll and receiving the Waterford Crystal National Championship Coaches’ Trophy.

Despite an undefeated 13-0 season by Nebraska and winning the Coaches Poll National Championship, the Cornhuskers finished the season ranked number 2 in the AP Poll, behind the also undefeated Rose Bowl champion Michigan Wolverines.

Tennessee finished the 1997 season 11-2. This game would be the Vols’ last loss until September 18, 1999.

Both teams would meet exactly two years later, on January 2, 2000, in the Fiesta Bowl.

Manning humbled by UT’s retirement of No. 16

It’s hard to overshadow Steve Spurrier’s return to Neyland Stadium.

Peyton Manning did it with ease.

Manning was on hand during Saturday’s Tennessee-South Carolina game for a pre-game ceremony to retire his No. 16 jersey number, which he wore from 1994 to 1997.

“I feel one of the most significant honors a player can have in his sport is to have his number retired,” Manning said. “Certainly for me to have that at Tennessee, it’s with great pride.”

Manning is now an All-Pro quarterback for the NFL’s Indianapolis Colts.

Manning was joined during the ceremony by his parents, Archie and Olivia Manning, his wife, Ashley Manning, university president John Peterson, athletic director Mike Hamilton, UT coach Phillip Fulmer, former UT assistant coach David Cutcliffe and UT’s 2005 team captains.

“I promise you,” Manning told the crowd after a video highlight montage, “I’ll always be a Tennessee Volunteer.”

Senior quarterback Rick Clausen will wear No. 7 for the rest of the year instead of No. 16, which he wore previously.

Clausen’s brother, Casey, wore No. 7 when he played at UT 2000-03.

Manning is one of three former Vols to have his jersey number retired this season. The late Reggie White’s No. 92 was retired during a pre-game ceremony on Oct. 1 when UT beat Ole Miss 27-10.

“The Minister of Defense”, as he was nicknamed, was a UT defensive lineman 1980-83.

Doug Atkins will have his No. 91 jersey number retired on Nov. 19 when the Vols host Vanderbilt. Atkins was a UT defensive lineman 1950-52.

“To have my number retired here,” Manning said, “along with Reggie White and Doug Atkins, is the greatest athletic honor I’ve had.”

White and Atkins’ numbers will no longer be used once the players wearing the numbers have finished their UT careers.

The three are the first to have their jerseys retired strictly for on-field accomplishments. Bill Nowling (32), Rudy Klarer (49), Willis Tucker (61), and Clyde “Ig” Fuson (62) had their jerseys numbers retired after they were killed in World War II.

Manning is the most decorated student-athlete in UT history. He left Tennessee as the SEC’s all-time leading passer with 11,201 yards.

During his NFL career, Manning has earned Pro Bowl honors five times in his seven seasons and has been named MVP each of the past two years.

Manning’s 30,993 passing yards is nearing the all-time top 20. Manning threw for an NFL-record 49 touchdown passes last season.

Manning further endeared himself to UT fans when he decided to return for his senior season instead of forgoing his final year of eligibility to enter the NFL draft. Manning was projected as the top pick in the draft as a junior in 1997.

“That’s one of the best decisions I’ve made in my life,” he said.

Manning made a weekend out of the trip to Knoxville. The Colts have a bye week.

Manning attended a UT practice, spoke to the team and participated in the pre-game Vol Walk amid thousands of fans that showed up early to see the former Vol.

“Fan would like for this team to be 6-0 instead of 3-3,” Manning said before the game. “A lot of places, you wouldn’t have this kind of turnout.

“That tells you what kind of fans these people are.”

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Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 3

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Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 2

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Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1

Dan Hampton at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 1  Dan Hampton I really enjoyed the Little Rock Touchdown Club today when Dan Hampton was our speaker. Hampton said that Jimmy Johnson was a great defensive coordinator for him to learn under when he played for Frank Broyles in 1975. Then when Lou Holtz came […]

My favorite past speakers of the Little Rock Touchdown Club and the 2013 lineup (Part 4)

Rex Nelson impersonates Houston Nutt at LRTC 08 27 12 Published on Oct 2, 2012 Little Rock Touchdown Club has Rex Nelson do the stats for the games played that week. Rex does a lot of impersonations of different people but I like his Houston Nutt the best. Video by Popeye Video – Mrpopeyevideo I have […]

My favorite past speakers of the Little Rock Touchdown Club and the 2013 lineup (Part 3) (Vince Dooley did a great job)

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My favorite past speakers of the Little Rock Touchdown Club and the 2013 lineup (Part 2) (Frank Broyles was outstanding!!)

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My favorite past speakers of the Little Rock Touchdown Club and the 2013 lineup (Part 1)

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Gus Malzahn does a great job at Little Rock Touchdown Club (Part 2)

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Open letter to President Obama (Part 410)The death tax discourages saving and investing

(Emailed to White House on 1-9-13.)

President Obama c/o The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President,

I know that you receive 20,000 letters a day and that you actually read 10 of them every day. I really do respect you for trying to get a pulse on what is going on out here.

The death tax discourages saving and investing.

Just before the end of the year, I shared some fascinating research about people dying quicker or living longer when there are changes in the death tax. Sort of the ultimate Laffer Curve response, particularly if it’s the former.

But the more serious point is that the death tax shouldn’t exist at all, as I’ve explained for USA Today. And in this CNBC debate, I argue that it is an immoral form of double taxation.

You’ll see that Jared sneakily tries to include wealth taxes and death taxes together in order to accuse me of an inaccuracy, but the chart (click to enlarge) clearly shows that there are many jurisdictions that wisely avoid this anti-competitive levy.

The data is a few years old, but it’s clear that the United states has one of the most punitive death tax systems in the world.

Unfortunately, this is a good description of many parts of our tax system. We also have the world’s highest corporate tax rate and we also have very high tax burdens on dividends and capital gains (and the tax rates on both just got worse thanks to the fiscal cliff legislation).

But probably the key difference between us is that Jared genuinely thinks government should be bigger and that the tax burden should be much higher.

Though I will give him credit. Not only does he want class-warfare tax hikes, such as a higher death tax, but he openly admits he wants to rape and pillage the middle class as well.

Not surprisingly, I argue that more revenue in Washington will exacerbate the real problem of a federal government that is too big and spending too much.

P.S. Here’s a cartoon that is only funny if you don’t think too deeply about what it means.

P.P.S. You’ll notice that the video in this post has good quality, unlike the fuzzy resolution and discontinuous footage in clips I’ve recently shared. That’s because Cato’s expert on such things is back in the office and we’re no longer relying on my sub-par technical knowledge.

_________

Thank you so much for your time. I know how valuable it is. I also appreciate the fine family that you have and your commitment as a father and a husband.

Sincerely,

Everette Hatcher III, 13900 Cottontail Lane, Alexander, AR 72002, ph 501-920-5733, lowcostsqueegees@yahoo.com

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Francis Schaeffer’s Philosophy of History by William H. Burnside

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 3) DEATH BY SOMEONE’S CHOICE

Published on Oct 6, 2012 by

The 45 minute video above is from the film series created from Francis Schaeffer’s book “Whatever Happened to the Human Race?” with Dr. C. Everett Koop. This book  really helped develop my political views concerning abortion, infanticide, and youth euthanasia, and it gave me a good understanding of those issues.

Francis Schaeffer’s Philosophy of History
By William H. Burnside
Contra Mundum, No. 2, 1992
Copyright 1991 William H. Burnside

________________
Death in the City, The God Who Is There, He Is There and He is Not Silent: many of us
remember the spiritual and intellectual excitement that came with reading those books
and seeing how clearly the Bible alone has a consistent world and life view. Truth,
absolute Truth, rooted in the person and character of God, was what we needed. We
discovered that God’s “divine power has given us everything we need for the life and
godliness” including intellectually-satisfying answers to basic questions of life.
Our starting point is the holy and righteous Creator of the Universe, the gracious God
who became Man in the Person of Jesus Christ and redeemed us from our sins, giving us
assurance of eternal life. With that came the promise of significance and meaning in life.
We are all significant, meaningful people because we were created in the very image of
God Himself. It was Francis and Edith Schaeffer who pointed these things out in such a
clear and intellectually honest fashion to my generation. It was he, too, who spoke
forcefully of the inadequacy of an orthodox, Biblical theology, without also a Biblical
life-style, one which exhibited the compassion and servant-hood of our Lord. Show us the
power of the Living God in our lives, he challenged a generation of young people, and
their teachers as well.
It is time for a reminder of those Biblical truths and it is time to introduce a new
generation to those great truths. We must echo Psalm 33:11: “The plans of the Lord stand
firm forever, the purposes of His heart through all generations.”
A Flow to History
History is linear; it is not cyclical. There is a flow to history that shows a continuity from
before the beginning when God the Trinity communicated and planned the creation of
man in His image, giving man a true volition. God, in effect, told Adam and Eve:
“Believe Me and stand in your place as a creature, not as one who is autonomous. Believe
Me and love Me as a creature to his Creator, and all will be well. This is the place for
which I have made you.

Created in the Image of God, but Fallen
But Adam and Eve rebelled against their Creator, opening the door to the catastrophe of
human history: a broken relationship with God, with each other in human society, and
within themselves. The effects of the Fall on human history were enormous but they did
not change the continuity of history which is rooted in eternity past and continues through
both advents of Christ into eternity future when the original creation will be restored to
God’s original design. God created immortal human beings. “Watch a man as he dies.
Five minutes later he still exists. There is no such thing as stopping the existence of man.
He still goes on. By the Fall man has not lost his being as a human being. He has not lost
those things which he intrinsically is as a man. He has not become an animal or a
machine. I live in a personal world, and God is dealing with me not for a few short years
but forever. And I can make different value judgments as I look at the world because I
understand that reality does not exist only between birth and death. A personal God is
acting in a true history that goes on forever.” Man qua man in human history reflects the
image of God in the way he was made and in the way he acts. Inevitably human beings
fulfill the cultural mandate to subdue and have dominion over God’s creation even if all
the while professing themselves to be autonomous and independent of God. The human
predicament is a moral problem; it is not metaphysical.
Not everything that happens in the world is “natural”… Everything in history
is not equally “normal”. Because of the abnormality brought about by man,
not everything which occurs in history should be there. Thus, not all that
history brings forth is right just because it happens, and not all personal drives
and motives are equally good. It is possible for Christians to speak of things
as absolutely wrong, for they are not original in human society, but are
derived from the Fall. They are in that sense ‘abnormal’. We can stand against
what is wrong and cruel without standing against God, for He did not make
the world as it now is.
God is Sovereign
History is one. There has been but one history: that which has actually happened as
opposed to what might have happened or what could have happened. Contingency,
though, is no problem in the Biblical system of thought and historical explanation. The
modalities of life are in the hands of the sovereign God who does all things after the
counsel of His own will. The First Cause is always the Sovereign Creator God of the
Universe and no man can stay His hand or say, “What doest thou?” Nevertheless within
the limitations of God’s sovereign decrees, plans, and purposes, human beings have the
incredible ability “to affect the external form of the universe”. Whether we plant a flower,
write a book, build a city, or destroy a civilization, man in the image of God has created
and built, alleviated suffering or brutalized his contemporaries. But he is always limited
and controlled by the sovereign God who controls the fullness of time and the historical
context wherein man acts. “If”, Jesus said, “the mighty works” done in Capernaum had

been done in Sodom, the Sodomites would have repented and “it would have remained to
Jesus’ day.”
One Reality
In both history and life there is but “one reality”. The “supernatural” and the “natural” are
both part of what is. They are not separate realms. The unseen invisible spiritual world is
here in human time/space history. When Elisha was surrounded by Syrian troops, God
opened the eyes of his servant so that he could see what was already there: “the mountain
was full of horses and chariots of fire all around Elisha”. That was why Elisha had told
his servant, “Do not fear, for those who are with us are more than those who are with
them.” (II Kings 6:15-17) The New Testament echoes that passage with almost identical
words: “You are from God, little children, and have overcome them; because greater is
He who is in you than he who is in the world.” (I John 4:4)
When Moses and Elijah appeared to Jesus on the Mount of Transfiguration, they were not
in another realm but on the very same mountain that Jesus and the disciples climbed in
Palestine. Jesus was glorified in a shining light in this world. When they came down from
the mount, time has passed: it was “the next day” (Luke 9:37). There is no platonic view
of reality and time stopping in a different realm, but simply the sequence of events within
a single reality. Dividing “’realms” into spiritual and natural categories does not separate
them into two realities. There is but one reality, that which actually exists and exists
coterminously.
After Jesus was glorified and appeared on this earth for forty days, his disciples touched
him, saw him, ate with him. When Jesus ascended, “it was at an hour of the day, on a day
of the calendar. There was a moment when His feet left the Mount of Olives.” And there
will be a day in the history of the world when He returns to stand at the identical
geographical location.
The apostle Paul saw the risen Lord on the Damascus Road. It was at midday in the desert
and the light of Christ’s glory was so brilliant that Paul was physically blinded by it. Not
only so; he heard a voice speaking to him in the Hebrew tongue.
Jesus appeared…. speaking in a normal language, using normal words and
normal grammar, to a man named Saul. With this, there is a complete denial
of the twentieth-century projection of these things into a religiously ‘other’
world. Here we are in the realm of space, time, history, normal
communication, and normal language.
Open System
In a word, the Biblical philosophy of history is an “open system” in which the
supernatural is just as much a part of reality as the “natural phenomenon” of everyday

life. It is simply not a closed, naturalistic system. This was a point Schaeffer made again
and again.
Perspective Point of History
The perspective point of history is the incarnation and work of Christ in this world. Even
before the foundation of the world the direction of history was towards the coming of
Christ in His first advent. The victory Jesus brought over sin, death, and hell has given
meaning and purpose to life and history ever since. It is still our perspective point while
we await His second advent, when the original creation will be restored in a new creation
in eternity future.
History to modern man is absurd, Schaeffer concluded, because he has no perspective
point and no absolutes by which to judge history. His starting point is wrong and that has
thrown off all his calculations. He starts with puny, finite, flawed, limited man and every
extension from himself leads only down a blind alley. He looks at the form of the
universe: it is “obviously not just a handful of pebbles thrown out there”. Where did it
come from? Why does it have form – and such a beautiful, spectacularly complex form?
If one begins with an impersonal universe, there is no explanation of the existence of
personality and man himself gets lost in the assumption of the eternality of matter.
“Give up creation and space-time historic reality and all that is left is uncreatedness. It is
not that something does not exist, but that it just stands there, autonomous to itself,
without solutions and without answers… Modern man’s [despair] rests primarily upon his
losing the reality of the createdness of all things except the personal God who always has
been.” All of these things, of course, have enormous significance for the study of history:
how can we study “human” history without knowing who man is or where he came from
or what his essential nature is.
Schaeffer, of course, found in the Bible and in traditional Biblical theology the
explanation for the historical “problem of evil” in the world. In the Biblical system
Schaeffer found that man and woman were created flawless without moral impediment
but with genuine volition which could say “no” to God as well as “yes”. When they did
just that, sin entered the world and death by sin and so the evils of history passed upon
all.
Judgment of God
And with sin came the judgment of God. In his forceful exposition of Romans chapter
one Schaeffer commented that man became foolish in his reasonings. “He has accepted a
position that is intellectually foolish not only with regard to what the Bible says, but also
to what exits—the universe and its form and the nature of man. In turning away from God
and the truth which He has given, man has thus become foolish in regard to what man is
and what the universe is. He is left with a position with which he cannot live, and is

caught in a multitude of intellectual and personal tensions.”
In Death in the City Schaeffer described Romans one as referring not only to the original
fall, but also to a historical principle of the judgment of God against any nation or culture
that turns its back on God. And that judgment is not only in the eschatological future, but
is also here and now in the events of history. A nation which turns away from God has
forgotten that the chief end of man is to love God and to have fellowship with Him. And
in that forgetting the nation has forgotten the purpose of man made in the image of God—
to be in relationship to the God who is there. In whatever period of history the effect is
the same: man forgets his purpose and thus he forgets who he is and what life means.
The hand of God is down into our culture in judgment… Unlike Zeus, whom
men imagined hurling down great thunderbolts, God has turned away in
judgment as our generation turned away from Him, and He is allowing cause
and effect to take its course in history.
“God can bring His judgment in one of two ways: either by direct intervention in history
or by the turning of the wheels of history.”
The Reformation brought “the wonderful gift of freedom… a balance of form and
freedom in state and society. Yet once we turn away from the Christian base, it is this
very freedom, now as a freedom without form, that brings a judgment upon us in the
turning of the wheels of history… There is death in the polis, there is death in the city!”
History is not mechanical. God works into history on the basis of His
character. Israel was carried off into Babylonian captivity not just for military
or economic reasons, but because a holy God had judged them because they
had turned away from Him. He will do the same in our generation. That’s part
of the reality of history.
God, History, and Evangelism
Schaeffer saw God’s sovereign actions in evangelism as an example of how God acts in
history.
There is no chance back of God, but history has real meaning. In Christianity, cause and
effect in space-time history has real meaning. The rational moral creatures whom God
created (of whom we know two classes—angels and men) influence history by choice. In
twentieth century terms, man is not programmed… Even nonpersonal elements of God’s
creation have a significance in history on their own level. The wind is the cause that
blows down the tree. In other words, mechanical cause and effect is significant in history,
and on another level, moral and rational creatures are significant in history by choice…
The marvel is that God created a universe with significance, that the things He created
have significance.

God, having created history, acts into history. It is not that history has no
meaning to God; it is not as though He is suspended above it… God acts into
history at every given moment in such a way that He respects its being there;
that is, He acts into it truly.
Schaeffer saw those same historical principles involved in election, evangelism, and
eternal salvation.
There is no chance back of God… What this means since the Fall is that when man
accepts Christ as Savior, there is a work of the Holy Spirit, yet man is not simply a zero;
there is a conscious side to justification.
If we fail to see that there is a conscious side to justification, we soon come to
the place where we must say that either the gospel is not universally offered
or that man is a zero. But neither is the case. The Bible makes very plain that
the gospel is universally offered and that man is significant…
Magnificence of Man
One of Schaeffer’s most memorable characteristics was his emphasis on the glory and
creativity of men and women created in the very image of God Himself and made not
only for their creator but for each other. God gave them an inner drive to produce and
create and to seek beauty and truth. Art, music, and literature reflect not only the
fallenness of man, but also the image of God in man and woman. Throughout history
human beings have fulfilled the Cultural Mandate even when they were not consciously
obeying God.
Eternity Future
The culmination of history centers around the return of Christ to this earth. Francis
Schaeffer was pre-millennial in his eschatology.
True Christians, those who have put their faith in Christ as Savior, shall be caught up to
meet Christ in the air and then come with Him. It is at this time that the bodies of
Christians who have died will be raised from the dead and that living Christians will be
glorified in a twinkling of an eye.
Before Christ’s coming visibly and in glory with His saints, there will be a period of great
apostasy with a dictator, called the “Antichrist”, ruling the world… He will control
governmental and economic life and will be worshiped as god.”
Christ will return visibly and in glory. “He overthrows the assembled might of the world
organized against Him by the Antichrist and Satan. This is the battle of Armageddon on
the plain of Megiddo in Palestine. Christ rules the earth for a thousand years….”

“There will be a new Heaven, a new earth, and a heavenly city. It is definite so that
Revelation 21-22 states the size of the heavenly city, that from which it is constructed,
that from which its foundations, gates, and streets are made. It is an objective reality. It is
eternal – forever and ever, without end.” So human history has a continuity from eternity
past to eternity future, controlled sovereignly by God Himself.

_______
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Francis Schaeffer’s prayer for us in USA

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Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 10 “Final Choices” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 1 0   Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode X – Final Choices 27 min FINAL CHOICES I. Authoritarianism the Only Humanistic Social Option One man or an elite giving authoritative arbitrary absolutes. A. Society is sole absolute in absence of other absolutes. B. But society has to be […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 9 “The Age of Personal Peace and Affluence” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 9 Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode IX – The Age of Personal Peace and Affluence 27 min T h e Age of Personal Peace and Afflunce I. By the Early 1960s People Were Bombarded From Every Side by Modern Man’s Humanistic Thought II. Modern Form of Humanistic Thought Leads […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 8 “The Age of Fragmentation” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 8 Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode VIII – The Age of Fragmentation 27 min I saw this film series in 1979 and it had a major impact on me. T h e Age of FRAGMENTATION I. Art As a Vehicle Of Modern Thought A. Impressionism (Monet, Renoir, Pissarro, Sisley, […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 7 “The Age of Non-Reason” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 7 Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode VII – The Age of Non Reason I am thrilled to get this film series with you. I saw it first in 1979 and it had such a big impact on me. Today’s episode is where we see modern humanist man act […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 6 “The Scientific Age” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 6 How Should We Then Live 6#1 Uploaded by NoMirrorHDDHrorriMoN on Oct 3, 2011 How Should We Then Live? Episode 6 of 12 ________ I am sharing with you a film series that I saw in 1979. In this film Francis Schaeffer asserted that was a shift in […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 5 “The Revolutionary Age” (Schaeffer Sundays)

E P I S O D E 5 How Should We Then Live? Episode 5: The Revolutionary Age I was impacted by this film series by Francis Schaeffer back in the 1970′s and I wanted to share it with you. Francis Schaeffer noted, “Reformation Did Not Bring Perfection. But gradually on basis of biblical teaching there […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 4 “The Reformation” (Schaeffer Sundays)

Dr. Francis Schaeffer – Episode IV – The Reformation 27 min I was impacted by this film series by Francis Schaeffer back in the 1970′s and I wanted to share it with you. Schaeffer makes three key points concerning the Reformation: “1. Erasmian Christian humanism rejected by Farel. 2. Bible gives needed answers not only as to […]

“Schaeffer Sundays” Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 3 “The Renaissance”

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 3 “The Renaissance” Francis Schaeffer: “How Should We Then Live?” (Episode 3) THE RENAISSANCE I was impacted by this film series by Francis Schaeffer back in the 1970′s and I wanted to share it with you. Schaeffer really shows why we have so […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 2 “The Middle Ages” (Schaeffer Sundays)

  Francis Schaeffer: “How Should We Then Live?” (Episode 2) THE MIDDLE AGES I was impacted by this film series by Francis Schaeffer back in the 1970′s and I wanted to share it with you. Schaeffer points out that during this time period unfortunately we have the “Church’s deviation from early church’s teaching in regard […]

Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 1 “The Roman Age” (Schaeffer Sundays)

Francis Schaeffer: “How Should We Then Live?” (Episode 1) THE ROMAN AGE   Today I am starting a series that really had a big impact on my life back in the 1970′s when I first saw it. There are ten parts and today is the first. Francis Schaeffer takes a look at Rome and why […]

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 5) TRUTH AND HISTORY

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 5) TRUTH AND HISTORY Published on Oct 7, 2012 by AdamMetropolis This crucial series is narrated by the late Dr. Francis Schaeffer and former Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop. Today, choices are being made that undermine human rights at their most basic level. Practices once […]

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 4) THE BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY

The opening song at the beginning of this episode is very insightful. Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 4) THE BASIS FOR HUMAN DIGNITY Published on Oct 7, 2012 by AdamMetropolis This crucial series is narrated by the late Dr. Francis Schaeffer and former Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop. Today, choices […]

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 3) DEATH BY SOMEONE’S CHOICE

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 3) DEATH BY SOMEONE’S CHOICE Published on Oct 6, 2012 by AdamMetropolis This crucial series is narrated by the late Dr. Francis Schaeffer and former Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop. Today, choices are being made that undermine human rights at their most basic level. Practices […]

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race?” (Episode 2) SLAUGHTER OF THE INNOCENTS

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race?” (Episode 2) SLAUGHTER OF THE INNOCENTS Published on Oct 6, 2012 by AdamMetropolis This crucial series is narrated by the late Dr. Francis Schaeffer and former Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop. Today, choices are being made that undermine human rights at their most basic level. Practices […]

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 1) ABORTION OF THE HUMAN RACE

It is not possible to know where the pro-life evangelicals are coming from unless you look at the work of the person who inspired them the most. That person was Francis Schaeffer.  I do care about economic issues but the pro-life issue is the most important to me. Several years ago Adrian Rogers (past president of […]

The following essay explores the role that Francis Schaeffer played in the rise of the pro-life movement. It examines the place of How Should We Then Live?, Whatever Happened to the Human Race?, and A Christian Manifesto in that process.

This essay below is worth the read. Schaeffer, Francis – “Francis Schaeffer and the Pro-Life Movement” [How Should We Then Live?, Whatever Happened to the Human Race?, A Christian Manifesto] Editor note: <p> </p> [The following essay explores the role that Francis Schaeffer played in the rise of the pro-life movement.  It examines the place of […]

Who was Francis Schaeffer? by Udo Middelmann

Great article on Schaeffer. Who was Dr. Francis A. Schaeffer? By Francis Schaeffer The unique contribution of Dr. Francis Schaeffer on a whole generation was the ability to communicate the truth of historic Biblical Christianity in a way that combined intellectual integrity with practical, loving care. This grew out of his extensive understanding of the Bible […]

By Everette Hatcher III | Posted in Francis Schaeffer | Edit | Comments

The President has sworn to abide by the Constitution when he takes the office but has President Obama upheld the Constitution in every case?

The President has sworn to abide by the Constitution when he takes the office but has President Obama upheld the Constitution in every case?

Morning Bell: 5 Ways Obama Has Trampled the Constitution

and

September 17, 2013 at 6:00 am

Today, the Constitution turns 226 years old. Let’s not forget it states that the President “shall take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed.”

The Obama Administration has done the opposite, turning the law on its head and ignoring constitutional limitations on its power.

>>> Read the Constitution now

Here are five of the Administration’s largest violations:

1. Changing Obamacare on the fly without congressional action

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act requires that businesses employing 50 or more full-time employees must provide health insurance or pay a fine per uncovered employee. The law schedules this mandate to begin in January 2014. Yet the Administration has already announced that it will put this requirement on hold.

Meanwhile, Congress explicitly considered and rejected proposed amendments to Obamacare that would have created a specific allowance for a congressional health insurance subsidy in the exchanges, and indeed, such an exemption is illegal. But the Administration told Members of Congress and their staffers that it would give them a generous taxpayer-funded subsidy just the same.

Obamacare won’t work as written, and the Administration is just seizing power unilaterally to rewrite it.

2. Implementing the DREAM Act by executive fiat

Congress has repeatedly considered, and rejected, a bill known as the Dream Act that would effectively grant amnesty to many illegal aliens. Yet in June 2012, Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano issued a directive to immigration officials instructing them to defer deportation proceedings against an estimated 1.7 million illegal aliens. Oddly, this happened about a year after President Obama admitted that “the President doesn’t have the authority to simply ignore Congress and say, ‘We’re not going to enforce the laws you’ve passed.’”

3. Making “recess appointments” while the Senate was in session

In January 2012, President Obama made four “recess” appointments to the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) and Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, claiming that the Senate was not available to confirm those appointees. Yet the Senate was not in recess at that time. The Recess Appointments Clause is not an alternative to Senate confirmation and is supposed to be only a stopgap for times when the Senate is unable to provide advice and consent. Eventually, a three-judge panel of the D.C. Circuit struck down the appointments to the NLRB as unconstitutional.

4. Waiving welfare work requirements

In July 2012, the Department of Health and Human Services gutted the work requirements out of the welfare reform law passed in 1996. It notified states of Secretary Kathleen Sebelius’s “willingness to exercise her waiver authority” so that states may eliminate the work participation requirement of Section 407 of the 1996 reforms. This flatly contradicts the law, which provides that waivers granted under other sections of the law “shall not affect the applicability of section 407 to the State.” Despite this unambiguous language, the Obama Administration continues to flout the law with its “revisionist” interpretation.

5. Encouraging federal contractors to violate the law

The WARN Act requires that federal contractors give 60 days’ notice before a mass layoff or plant closing. Employers who do not give notice are liable for employees’ back pay and benefits as well as additional penalties. With defense-related spending cuts set to start on January 2, 2013, defense contractors should have issued notice by November 2, 2012 (just four days before the presidential election). Yet, the Department of Labor instructed defense contractors not to issue notice for layoffs due to sequestration until after the election—and assured them they would be reimbursed with taxpayer funds for any subsequent liability for violating the law.

One of the Constitution’s strongest features is its simplicity. It doesn’t serve as a laundry list of rights, as many modern constitutions attempt to do. Instead, it lays out a governing framework, divides power among three co-equal branches, and protects Americans from having their rights usurped by an overreaching government.

But for the Constitution to survive the next quarter-century, we need leaders who are dedicated to maintaining it, not stretching it to suit their immediate political needs.

 

 

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Open letter to President Obama (Part 409)SOHLS: Remembering 40 Years and over 50 million lives and video DEATH BY SOMEONE’S CHOICE

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Why Are Republicans Willing to Help Obama Make America More Like Europe When the Welfare State Is Collapsing? (includes cartoons)

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Open letter to President Obama (Part 404) Need to listen to ideas on cutting government spending from Senator Ted Cruz

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Truth Tuesday: Why Francis Schaeffer matters by David Steele

Truth Tuesday: Why Francis Schaeffer matters by David Steele

_______________________

I love the works of Francis Schaeffer and I have been on the internet reading several blogs that talk about Schaeffer’s work and the work below by David Steele was really helpful. Schaeffer’s film series “How should we then live?  Wikipedia notes, “According to Schaeffer, How Should We Then Live traces Western history from Ancient Rome until the time of writing (1976) along three lines: the philosophic, scientific, and religious.[3] He also makes extensive references to art and architecture as a means of showing how these movements reflected changing patterns of thought through time. Schaeffer’s central premise is: when we base society on the Bible, on the infinite-personal God who is there and has spoken,[4] this provides an absolute by which we can conduct our lives and by which we can judge society.  Here are some posts I have done on this series: Francis Schaeffer’s “How should we then live?” Video and outline of episode 10 “Final Choices” episode 9 “The Age of Personal Peace and Affluence”episode 8 “The Age of Fragmentation”episode 7 “The Age of Non-Reason” episode 6 “The Scientific Age”  episode 5 “The Revolutionary Age” episode 4 “The Reformation” episode 3 “The Renaissance”episode 2 “The Middle Ages,”, and  episode 1 “The Roman Age,” .

In the film series “WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE HUMAN RACE?” the arguments are presented  against abortion (Episode 1),  infanticide (Episode 2),   euthanasia (Episode 3), and then there is a discussion of the Christian versus Humanist worldview concerning the issue of “the basis for human dignity” in Episode 4 and then in the last episode a close look at the truth claims of the Bible.

Francis Schaeffer

__________________________

Here is the link:

WHY FRANCIS SCHAEFFER MATTERS: The Line of Despair – PART 3

The loss of antithesis in American culture led to what Dr. Schaeffer coined the “line of despair” or giving up all hope of achieving a rational unified answer to knowledge and life.  Schaeffer outlines what he believes are the various steps below this line of despair.  He begins with the German philosopher, Georg William Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) who became the first man to open the door into the line of despair.  Hegel taught  what we really have is a thesis, and an opposite antithesis, with the answer of their relationship not a horizontal movement of cause and effect, but a synthesis, or dialectical thinking.  In the end result, Hegel’s philosophy produced a synthesis as opposed to antithesis which could be arrived at by reason.

Schaeffer believes that while Hegel opened the door to the line of despair the Danish philosopher, Soren Kierkegaard was the first one to go below the line.    Kierkegaard concluded that one could not arrive at synthesis by reason alone.  Rather, one achieves everything of real importance by taking a “leap of faith.”  Schaeffer, therefore, maintains that Kierkegaard’s conclusions gradually led to the absolute separation of the rational and logical from faith.

What is this leap and what does it involve?  Schaeffer teaches that Kierkegaard’s leap put away the hope of any unity.  Schaeffer writes, “The leap is common to every sphere of modern man’s thought.  Man is forced to the despair of such a leap because he cannot live merely as a machine . . . If below the line man is dead, above the line, after the non-rational leap, man is left without categories.  There are no categories because categories are related to rationality and logic.  There is therefore no truth and no nontruth in antithesis, no right or wrong – you are adrift.” (Escape From Reason, 241, 256).

Schaeffer continues to chronicle the subsequent philosophers who followed Kierkegaard’s thought including the atheistic existentialism of Karl Jaspers, Jean Paul Sartre and Martin Heidegger.  These men reasoned below the line of despair and gave up hope of a rational answer to the questions of life.  The end result: they are left with only the anti-rational.

Schaeffer proceeds to explain what he considers the further steps under the line of despair.  The first as noted above began with philosophy.  The second step was art.  The third – music.  The fourth – culture, and the fifth step was the new theology which was opened by Karl Barth.  While most refer to this brand of theology as “liberal” or “neo-orthodox,” and rightly so, the issue at hand runs deeper than labels.  Indeed, liberal theology rejects the deity of Christ, the inerrancy of Scripture and the New Testament miracles.  The new theology knows nothing of man being created in the image of God.  But Schaeffer adds further clarity to the issue:  “All the new theology and mysticism is nothing more than a faith contrary to rationality, deprived of content and incapable of contentful communication.  You can bear ‘witness’ to it, but you cannot discuss it.  Rationality and faith are out of contact with each other” (The God Who Is There, 64).

Man, therefore, is left in a state of despair which “arises from the abandonment of the hope of a unified answer for knowledge and life.  Modern man continues to hang on to his rationalism and his autonomous revolt even though to do so he has had to abandon any rational hope of a unified answer” (Escape From Reason, 235-236).

The consequences and despair of modern man can be found in three areas.  The first is falling prey to nihilism or embracing a worldview that offers no hope.

The second is  found in the fact that he accepts a false dichotomy (what Schaeffer calls an “absolute dichotomy”) between nature and grace.  However, the modern scheme is presently a dichotomy between contentless faith (no rationality) and rationality (no meaning).  “All the new theology and mysticism is nothing more than a faith contrary to rationality, deprived of content and incapable of contentful communication.  Rationality and faith are out of contact with each other” (The God Who Is There, 64).

Third, since there is no integration point between rationality and faith man engages in acts of desperation in order to find meaning, namely, he accepts a mysticism which gives an illusion of unity to the whole.  Hence we understand why the influx of eastern religion such as Hinduism, i.e. the New Age Movement has gained such a popular foothold in America today.  If there is no hope of a unified field of knowledge one must cling to a mystical world-view that has no rational base but promises hope for the present and the future.

Schaeffer enhances his discussion by contrasting the Christian faith with modern man’s faith which has turned inward.  In Christianity the value of faith depends upon the object towards which the faith is directed.  So it looks outward to the God who is there, and to the Christ who in history died upon the cross once for all, finished the work of atonement, and on the third day rose again in space and in time.  This makes the Christian faith open to discussion and verification (The God Who Is There, 65).

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Francis Schaeffer’s wife Edith passes away on Easter weekend 2013 Part 7 (includes pro-life editorial cartoon)

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By Everette Hatcher III | Posted in Francis Schaeffer | Edit | Comments (0)

Open letter to President Obama (Part 409)SOHLS: Remembering 40 Years and over 50 million lives and video DEATH BY SOMEONE’S CHOICE

(Emailed to White House on 2-1-13.)

President Obama c/o The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President,

I know that you receive 20,000 letters a day and that you actually read 10 of them every day. I really do respect you for trying to get a pulse on what is going on out here.

In the film series “WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE HUMAN RACE?” the arguments are presented  against abortion (Episode 1),  infanticide (Episode 2),   euthenasia (Episode 3), and then there is a discussion of the Christian versus Humanist worldview concerning the issue of “the basis for human dignity” in Episode 4 and then in the last episode a close look at the truth claims of the Bible

I truly believe that many of the problems we have today in the USA are due to the advancement of humanism in the last few decades in our society. Ronald Reagan appointed the evangelical Dr. C. Everett Koop to the position of Surgeon General in his administration. He partnered with Dr. Francis Schaeffer in making the video below. It is very valuable information for Christians to have.  Actually I have included a video below that includes comments from him on this subject.

___________

Francis and Edith Schaeffer pictured below.

Francis Schaeffer: “Whatever Happened to the Human Race” (Episode 3) DEATH BY SOMEONE’S CHOICE

Published on Oct 6, 2012 by

SOHLS: Remembering 40 Years and over 50 million lives PDF Print E-mail
Written by Marie Bowen   
Sanctity of Human Life Sunday (SOHLS) will be celebrated in churches across the nation this Sunday, January 20, 2013. In sermons, prayers, and songs, worshipers will acknowledge God as our Creator and affirm our identity as persons made in his image and set apart for his glory and service.Motte Brown wrote this account of the establishment of SOHLS in 2007. It is currently posted on Boundless Line:In 1983, an organization named Christian Action Council (now known as Care Net), founded with the help of Francis Schaeffer and former Surgeon General C. Everett Koop, asked President Ronald Reagan to “create a special day to focus on the intrinsic value of human life.”Sources conflict about whether the initial proclamation was 1983 or 1984, but it was President Ronald Reagan who designated the third Sunday in January as Sanctity of Human Life Day. The third Sunday of January is the closest Sunday to the January 22nd anniversary of the 1973 Roe V. Wade Supreme Court Decision that legalized abortion in the United States.According to Wikipedia, Reagan issued the proclamation annually for the remainder of his Presidency. Both Presidents Bush (George H. and George W.) continued the tradition interrupted by Bill Clinton’s tenure of eight years as President. President Obama has declined proclamation of Sanctity of Human Life day during his presidential tenure to date.The purpose of Sanctity of Human Life Sunday (SOHLS) was articulated by Ronald Reagan as follows:Since 1973, however, more than 15 million unborn children [that number now stands at more than 50 million] have died in legalized abortions — a tragedy of stunning dimensions that stands in sad contrast to our belief that each life is sacred. These children, over tenfold [now even more] the number of Americans lost in all our Nation’s wars, will never laugh, never sing, never experience the joy of human love; nor will they strive to heal the sick, or feed the poor, or make peace among nations. Abortion has denied them the first and most basic of human rights, and we are infinitely poorer for their loss.

We are poorer not simply for lives not led and for contributions not made, but also for the erosion of our sense of the worth and dignity of every individual. To diminish the value of one category of human life is to diminish us all. Slavery, which treated Blacks as something less than human, to be bought and sold if convenient, cheapened human life and mocked our dedication to the freedom and equality of all men and women. Can we say that abortion — which treats the unborn as something less than human, to be destroyed if convenient — will be less corrosive to the values we hold dear?

Throughout the years since 1983, various individuals and organizations have hoped to accomplish a number of goals through the celebration of SOHLS. In addition to celebrating the intrinsic value of human life, Carenet, a network of pregnancy care centers, sees this important day as “an opportunity for pregnancy centers to share about the work they do to bring life-affirming resources to their communities and to empower women and men to choose life for their unborn children.” SOHLS is a Sunday that highlights the hope and services pregnancy care centers offer. Many churches participate in raising funds by kicking off a baby bottle campaign on this day in their churches for the benefit of community pregnancy care outreach.

SOHLS is an opportunity to educate congregations on life issues. Through special bulletin inserts, special speakers, children’s sermons, and targeted worship resources churches seek to turn the tragic reality of abortion into a focus on the sacred value of human life. Often special events such as a video showing, a pro-life baby shower, special Sunday lessons and sermons, or the ringing of bells, the planting of crosses, or candle vigils help to commemorate the lives lost to abortion.

Remembering Roe: a special day of prayer and fasting. SOHLS is particularly significant in 2013, the 40th year since the Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton which took place on January 22, 1973 and legalized abortion in our country. In addition to the Sunday celebration a host of pro-life organizations, who together affirm the value, dignity and sanctity of human life, have joined together to organize a special day of prayer and fasting remembering Roe on January 22, 2013. Individuals may register at http://www.rememberingroe.com for web based prayer event, post prayers on the website, send a message to the president, or share personal stories of where they were when abortion was legalized

An Ecumenical prayer service: National Memorial for the Pre-Born and Their Mothers and Fathers. A special commemorative service sponsored by members of the National Pro-Life Religious Council will be held at Constitution Hall in Washington D.C. ( (18th and D St.) on the January 25, 2013. Held just a few hours before the March for Life, the 8:30-10:30 am ecumenical prayer service will include participants from several denominations. Participants will commemorate lives lost to abortion and remember the life of Nellie Gray, founder of the March for Life.


Resources for SOHLS

Worship resources from a distinctly Presbyterian and Reformed perspective are available under the ‘Ministry Equipping’ tab of this website.

Right to Life of Michigan publishes a downloadable Prolife Litany and a Christian Discussion Guide on their website.

Focus on the Family offers videos to show on Sanctity of Human Life Sunday or throughout the month of January to inform about the impact of abortion on our nation.

Lutherans for Life is offering a slightly different focus in their resources for SOHLS in 2013. See their website for a host of materials for “living with Dying.”

Bethany Christian Services provides online resources with a focus on adoption.

Thank you so much for your time. I know how valuable it is. I also appreciate the fine family that you have and your commitment as a father and a husband.

Sincerely,

Everette Hatcher III, 13900 Cottontail Lane, Alexander, AR 72002, ph 501-920-5733, lowcostsqueegees@yahoo.com

 
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Debt Limit, Spending Bills, and Picking the Right Fight (includes cartoons)

I wish they would not raise the debt ceiling limit and learn to live within their means.

In an ideal world, Congress would not raise the debt limit.

This would force – automatically and immediately – a balanced budget. More important, it would produce a meaningful reduction in the burden of government spending.

Debt Limit FWAnd contrary to hyperbole from defenders of the status quo, it doesn’t mean default since the federal government collects about ten times as much revenue as needed to pay interest on the debt.

But even though that seems like a fantasy outcome for people like me from the Cato Institute, I actually don’t think libertarians, fiscal conservatives, and other advocates of smaller government should make the debt limit a do-or-die battle.

As I say in this interview on Fox Business News, the “continuing resolution” is a much better vehicle.

To elaborate, my concern is that the White House will be able to whip up too much hysteria on the debt limit, particularly since the media will serve as an echo chamber and Bernanke will act as a lackey for the White House.

And if the Fed Chairman is able to rattle Wall Street and cause a big drop in the stock market, it’s quite likely that Republicans will buckle rather than run the risk of being blamed for causing a financial calamity.

But the Obama Administration has less leverage when the “CR” expires on March 27. Like the debt limit, the continuing resolution is a must-pass piece of legislation. Heck, it’s even important since it’s the only way of funding the non-entitlement portions of the federal government for the rest of the 2013 fiscal year.

This is where advocates of small government should draw a line and demand fiscal restraint. They should pass a CR, but only after eliminating some egregious waste from the federal budget.

Yes, the President can object to fiscal reforms. He can even veto such a bill. But the worst thing that happens under a stalemate is a “government shutdown.”

And not even a real shutdown. Things that actually have some value, like the military and the air traffic control system, continue operating. All that happens is that “non-essential” programs, agencies, and department are shuttered. The Department of Housing and Urban Development is a good example.

Let’s now think about leverage. Who will care more about reopening HUD and other non-essential parts of the government? The answer, quite obviously, is that bureaucrats and interest groups are the only ones who will care, and this means the pressure will be on the left.

Indeed, this is exactly what happened in 1995 when Newt Gingrich and Bill Clinton had their famous shutdown battle. The Democrats were anxious to cut a deal to get the gravy train rolling again, and Republicans used that leverage to achieve a significant policy victory.

This doesn’t mean a CR fight and potential government shutdown is free of political risk. Indeed, Newt Gingrich lost popularity as a result of that fight. But that was probably more a reflection of his political style.

In any event, a CR battle definitely has less downside risk than a debt limit battle. So if folks on Capitol Hill actually want to fight to save the country from becoming Greece, why not pick the battle that’s easier to win?

An Amusing Video Medley of Moral Preening on Guns from Piers Morgan

I’ve shared some very powerful videos that help explain why we should respect and celebrate the individual right to keep and bear arms.

Here’s one that’s worth sharing just for entertainment value. It shows a British import desperately trying to gain visibility and ratings by engaging in a series of gun control debates.

I can’t vouch for the veracity of what’s being said by Ventura, Pratt, et al, but they obviously win the overall arguments about the right to self defense, the fight against crime, and having the means to resist tyranny and oppression.

But as much as I like all of these videos, the best arguments for the Second Amendment come from this conservative and this liberal.

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understand.

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Tom Osborne at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 7 (Keith Jackson’s heroics against Huskers!!!)

Tom Osborne at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 7

Tony Dungy on the Influence of Tom Osborne

Uploaded on Oct 11, 2011

Former Golden Gopher football player and NFL head coach Tony Dungy talks about how as an up-and-coming coach he watched Tom Osborne coach a practice and that day single handedly changed his entire coaching philosophy.

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Keith Jackson 88-yard run vs. NU in 1985

Keith Jackson one-handed catch vs. NU in 1986

Uploaded on Sep 28, 2006

This was a 41-yard one-handed catch by Keith Jackson against Nebraska on a cold November night in Lincoln in 1986. It set up a game-winning field goal giving OU an Orange Bowl berth.

Thanks to jimsoklahomasportspage.com!

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Tom Osborne did a great job on 9-9-13 at the Little Rock Touchdown Club. Before he was introduced David Bazzel mentioned that he spoke to Keith Jackson (who was sitting near my table) at the lunch and Keith was quick to point out that he is 4-0 against Nebraska when he played at Oklahoma. I actually spoke to Keith before the lunch and I asked him if Osborne would mention that miracle catch he made in Lincoln in the closing seconds of the game in 1986 which eventually led to a national championship that year. Jackson responded, “I doubt he will even recognize that I am here.” Jackson was actually wrong on that point. Osborne noted Jackson 3 times during his speech. He noted that David was right that he did get up at 4 am to be here today and he would not have done it if he knew that Jackson was going to tell that he was 4-0 against the Huskers. (This line got a laugh.) Secondly, Osborne mentioned the 88 yard reverse that Jackson ran on the Huskers in 1985 for a TD. Third, when it was time for questions he said, “I am ready for anyone to ask me a question except Keith Jackson. (This line got a good laugh too.).

When I was watching the national championship game in January of 1998 between Tennessee and Nebraska the announcer made the statement that both Tom Osborne and Peyton Manning were involved in their last game on that day and only one could win. On that day it turned out to be Tom Osborne who won but Peyton had a great career too.

The middle son of former Ole Miss and NFL star Archie Manning, Peyton Manning was born on March 24, 1976 in New Orleans, Louisiana, where his father Archie played for the Saints. Peyton Manning grew up in the Crescent City and attended Isidore Newman High School where he starred at quarterback, turning the eye of most major colleges. (Peyton Manning’s junior season highlight film.) Most insiders thought that he would attend Ole Miss and follow in his father’s footsteps, but Tennessee’s recruiting efforts, led by offensive coordinator David Cutcliffe, made the difference as Peyton Manning chose to come to Tennessee.

The Tennessee years: 1994-98
Most people, including the Tennessee coaches, thought that Peyton Manning’s freshman season would be led by quarterback Jerry Colquitt, but in the first series of the first game of the season at UCLA Colquitt severely injured his knee, forcing coach Phillip Fulmer and the Vols to give Todd Helton, Manning, and fellow freshman Branndon Stewart shots at playing. Todd Helton got the bulk of the snaps, and became the Tennessee starter until being injured during a loss at Mississippi State. Peyton Manning got the majority of the snaps at that point and became the Vols’ starter for the rest of his career.
Beginning with the next game, a 10-9 homecoming win over Washington State, Peyton Manning went 39-6 over the rest of his career at Tennessee, as the Vols outscored their opponents by an average of 35-18. As part of that prolific offense under Peyton Manning, Tennessee scored 40 or more points a staggering 16 times in his 45 starts, or better than once every three games. Included in that is a memorable night in Birmingham in 1995, when, on October 14, the Vols ended a decade of frustration against Alabama with a 41-14 thumping of the Crimson Tide, which opened with an 80-yard strike from Peyton Manning to Joey Kent on the game’s first play. The win over the hated Tide wasn’t just memorable for the end of the streak, but also for a play that Peyton Manning became known for at Tennessee, a quarterback bootleg that put the Vols up 21-0 in the first quarter.
After racking up numerous awards during his junior campaign, most thought that Peyton Manning would turn pro, but Manning stunned outsiders again and endeared himself to Tennessee fans forever by deciding to remain a Vol for his senior season.
Peyton Manning’s senior season started with a bang, as the Vols’ air attack blasted Texas Tech, 52-17. For the third time in as many tries as a starter, Peyton Manning and the Vols fell to Florida. But unlike previous seasons, Florida stumbled down the stretch while Peyton Manning and the Vols stayed flawless, earning the program’s first SEC East title and a berth in the SEC Championship game. Peyton Manning rallied the Vols in that game, 30-29, but injured his knee in the process. The closer-than-expected win might have been a factor, as were whispers of ESPN promoting a different candidate, but in a stunning move Peyton Manning finished second in the Heisman Trophy balloting that season. Peyton Manning finished his career at Tennessee holding a number of school records, including wins, plays in a game (70, against Florida in 1996), passing yards (game 508 against Kentucky in 1997, season 3,789 in 1997 and career 11,201).

The NFL years: 1998-
Critics used the close win in the SEC Championship game, Peyton Manning’s injury in it, and the Vols’ bowl loss to co-National Champion Nebraska to question whether or not Peyton Manning deserved to be the first pick in the 1998 NFL Draft. Thankfully for the Indianapolis Colts, they chose Peyton Manning first over Ryan Leaf. While Leaf was out of the league and in legal trouble within a matter of years, Peyton Manning helped turn around a floundering Colts franchise.
Peyton Manning’s Colts went 3-13 in his first season, but over the next 11 seasons the team won 138 games, all the more remarkable considering that the team had a 6-10 stumble in the midst of that run. Without that, Peyton Manning’s Colts averaged a 13-win season every year since 1999.
During that time, Peyton Manning broke Dan Marino’s 20-year-old record for touchdowns in a season, with 49 in 2004, as well as well as throwing for close to 55,000 yards and just under 400 touchdowns all told.
The highlight for Peyton Manning and for Colts fans, though, was not his multiple MVP seasons, but when Manning led Indianapolis to the 2007 Super Bowl title after the 2006 season, the first for the franchise since the early days of the Super Bowl era.

Getting to know Tennessee legend, NFL superstar Peyton Manning
Peyton Manning reflects on beating Ole Miss
Colts making Peyton Manning highest paid player
Peyton Manning nears 50,000-yard mark
Coming back to Tennessee never gets old for Peyton Manning
Peyton Manning’s perseverence pays off
Peyton Manning gets his Super Bowl
Peyton Manning’s legacy shows up in kids named for him
Peyton Manning Super at last
Peyton Manning gives UT $1 million
Peyton Manning still fond of Vols
Peyton Manning humbled by jersey retirement
Peyton Manning, family a treat for all SEC fans

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Tom Osborne at the Little Rock Touchdown Club Part 6

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Big Ten Icons: Tom Osborne

Uploaded on Oct 31, 2011

Tom Osborne was Nebraska’s head football coach for 25 seasons (1973-1997), the longest tenure in school history. Under Osborne’s direction, the Cornhuskers amassed a 255-49-3 record. (Big Ten Icons)

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Jim Rascoe when he introduced Tom Osborne at the Little Rock Touchdown Club on 9-9-13 said that in his last game as head coach of the Nebraska Corn huskers was able to take on a 11-1 Tennessee Vol team with Peyton Manning leading it and early in the 2nd half they took a 35-3 lead. David Bazzel noted that never in the 25 years he coached did he lose over 3 games in a single year and the last 5 years he coached he had a 60-3 record. Take a look at this record:

Head coaching record

Year Team Overall Conference Standing Bowl/playoffs Coaches# AP°
Nebraska Cornhuskers (Big Eight Conference) (1973–1995)
1973[7] Nebraska 9–2–1 4–2–1 T-2nd W Cotton 11T 7
1974 Nebraska 9–3 5–2 T-2nd W Sugar 9 8
1975 Nebraska 10–2 6–1 T-1st L Fiesta 9 9
1976 Nebraska 9–3–1 4–3 T-4th W Bluebonnet 7 9
1977 Nebraska 9–3 5–2 T-2nd W Liberty 10 12
1978 Nebraska 9–3 6–1 T-1st L Orange 8 8
1979 Nebraska 10–2 6–1 2nd L Cotton 7 9
1980[8] Nebraska 10–2 6–1 2nd W Sun 7 7
1981 Nebraska 9–3 7–0 1st L Orange 9 11
1982 Nebraska 12–1 7–0 1st W Orange 3 3
1983 Nebraska 12–1 7–0 1st L Orange 2 2
1984 Nebraska 10–2 6–1 T-1st W Sugar 3 4
1985 Nebraska 9–3 6–1 2nd L Fiesta 10 11
1986 Nebraska 10–2 5–2 3rd W Sugar 4 5
1987 Nebraska 10–2 6–1 2nd L Fiesta 6 6
1988 Nebraska 11–2 7–0 1st L Orange 10 10
1989 Nebraska 10–2 6–1 2nd L Fiesta 12 11
1990[9] Nebraska 9–3 5–2 3rd L Citrus 17T 24
1991 Nebraska 9–2–1 6–0–1 T-1st L Orange 16 15
1992 Nebraska 9–3 6–1 1st L Orange 14 14
1993 Nebraska 11–1 7–0 1st L Orange 3 3
1994 Nebraska 13–0 7–0 1st W Orange 1 1
1995 Nebraska 12–0 7–0 1st W Fiesta 1 1
Nebraska Cornhuskers (Big 12 Conference) (1996–1997)
1996 Nebraska 11–2 8–0 1st (North) W Orange 6 6
1997 Nebraska 13–0 8–0 1st (North) W Orange 1 2
Nebraska: 255–49–3 (.836) 160–23–2 (.870)
Total: 255–49–3 (.836)
      National championship         Conference title         Conference division title

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Here is a good story on Osborne’s last game as coach:

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Nebraska beat Peyton Manning and Tennessee to secure the 1997 title, its third in four years.
Nebraska beat Peyton Manning and Tennessee to secure the 1997 title, its third in four years.
Bill Frakes/SI

Four years of winning began with a loss. Propelled by an errant kick that went wide left, but struck the Nebraska Cornhuskers square in the gut.

When the Cornhuskers trudged off the field at the Orange Bowl on Jan. 1, 1994, they had just come up a field goal short of winning the 1993 national championship. Despite being 17-point underdogs to a Charlie Ward-led Florida State team, Nebraska had held the lead with less than two minutes to play and nearly pulled off a major upset, losing 18-16.

Something happened that New Year’s night that transformed the Cornhuskers. A resolve was reached. A pact was made by those returning for the following season. Even though the program had a rich history of success, it had been more than two decades since the Cornhuskers had won a national championship. They literally were inches away from changing that in the 1993 season. They were determined to erase that gap entirely in 1994, and beyond.

“Everybody came back to campus about two weeks later, and you could just tell there was this commitment among the team,” recalled Jason Peter, a defensive tackle who was a redshirt freshman in 1994. “You were either getting on the boat that was going 100 miles per hour, or we’re going to leave you behind. That was it. You had to make the decision whether you were going to commit yourself fully.”

That boat roared off and barely slowed down over the next four years. From 1994 through 1997, Nebraska went 49-2 and won three national championships. The 1994 and ’95 titles were won outright, while the ’97 championship in the pre-BCS era was shared with Michigan (the Coaches’ Poll gave the crown to 13-0 Nebraska, but the media went with the 12-0 Wolverines). In 1996 the Cornhuskers had to settle for an 11-2 record and a No. 6 national ranking.

It remains one of the greatest four-year runs in college football history — and one that the Alabama Crimson Tide are threatening to challenge this season. Alabama is 36-4 with two national championships over the past three seasons, and the Tide figure to be in serious contention for a third title this year.

The lack of a three-peat in college football since World War II has been well documented. But winning three national championships in a four-year span is almost as rare. In fact, Nebraska is the only team to have pulled it off. Alabama captured three titles in five years from 1961-65, and Miami did the same from 1987-91. Some of the premier programs in college football — Oklahoma, Ohio State, Texas, USC — have come close. Florida had a chance in 2009 but lost to Alabama in the SEC championship game.

So how were those mid-1990s Cornhuskers able to do it? Former head coach Tom Osborne and several players who were there for all three championships said the 1993 Orange Bowl loss truly was the catalyst for the ensuing four-year run. That game prompted Nebraska to adopt the phrase “Unfinished Business” as its slogan for the ’94 season.

“The Florida State game proved to us that we were capable of taking this thing to another level, and the way we lost it gave everybody the motivation we needed to do it,” offensive tackle Eric Anderson said. “That game was probably about as important to that four-year run as any of them. It essentially laid the foundation for the next four years.”

That foundation was then topped with a degree of commitment and unselfishness by the players that Osborne said was as strong as any he witnessed during his 25 years as the team’s head coach.

“We had very strong team leaders, guys who were willing to sacrifice their personal goals for the team, and the rest of the players followed their lead,” said Osborne, who retired as head coach after the ’97 season and currently is the Nebraska athletic director. “The level of team unity that we had was really exceptional during that stretch. It was probably the best of all the teams I had.”

Osborne helped foster that sense of solidarity by creating a group he called the Unity Council. Each segment of the team (offensive line, running backs, linebackers, etc.) elected two players to represent it on the council. Those 16 players were responsible for a considerable amount of the day-to-day handling of team issues. This amplified the feeling among the players that they were personally accountable for the success or failure of the team.

“Guys took ownership of the program, because Coach Osborne made us feel like it was ours,” said defensive end Grant Wistrom, who won the 1997 Lombardi Award and played in the NFL for nine years. “When you feel like you have a stake in something, you’re going to work a little bit harder for it.

“I fully believe that’s why we had the success that we had, because we felt like it was our team. There’s a whole different level of commitment when you feel like it’s your blood on the line. You’re not just a cog in the wheel. You’re the engine that drives it.”

Even one of the most controversial periods of this four-year stretch could not fracture the Cornhuskers’ feeling of unity. If anything, it might have strengthened it. Early in the 1995 season following a 50-10 thrashing of Michigan State — which, ironically, was led by current Alabama head coach Nick Saban — star running back Lawrence Phillips was arrested for assaulting his ex-girlfriend. Phillips was suspended from the team but Osborne eventually reinstated him, a move that was met with widespread criticism. None of that slowed down the Cornhuskers, who throttled their opponents that season by an average score of 53-15.

“I think the intense scrutiny actually brought the team together more,” Anderson said. “We rallied around that and had an us-against-the-world mentality.”

Of course, being unified doesn’t accomplish much if everybody is doing the same thing incorrectly. The Cornhuskers of the mid 1990s had an almost obsessive desire to work on every minute detail of their game in a never-ending quest for perfection.

“We had over 100 scripted plays that we ran during practice,” offensive guard Jon Zatechka said. “The repetition made it almost second-nature when you were out there during the game. And if you didn’t take a proper step, if you were just 6 inches off, you’d get yelled at. It’s amazing how specific our coaching staff was on how we had to do things and how perfect they wanted us to be. But that paid off during games.”

That sounds a lot like the current coaching staff in Tuscaloosa. Saban is known for being a strict taskmaster who likes to talk about the “process” of building a team. More than once he has screamed at a backup player during the final minutes of a blowout victory, expecting nothing less than the best regardless of the situation on the field. Peter said the Cornhuskers of the mid-’90s had a similar mindset.

“It’s easy to focus on the big things; that will get you eight or nine wins a year,” Peter said. “But to get 13 or 14 of them and win a championship, you have to do the little things right. That’s why Saban has been so successful. He’s a master of the attention to detail. It’s fun to watch those guys. They’re a lot like we were.”

Sure, there was some good fortune along the way. Nebraska did not have many major injuries during those years (though quarterback Tommie Frazier missed much of the 1994 season with a blood clot in his leg). And then there was the famous “kicked ball” game in 1997, in which the Cornhuskers drove 67 yards in the final minute for a tying touchdown that was scored when what appeared to be a game-ending incompletion bounced off the foot of Nebraska’s Shevin Wiggins and was caught in the end zone by Matt Davison. The Cornhuskers won in overtime and went on to beat Tennessee and Peyton Manning for their third championship in four years.

“Good luck plays a role in any championship run, much less three out of four,” Wistrom said. “But there was also something special about those teams. We felt like we had the tools and the determination and the commitment that it didn’t matter what happened, we were going to win.

“Nobody put themselves above the team. Nobody worried about what happened yesterday or what might happen tomorrow. The only thing that mattered was what you’re doing today. If you can get guys to buy into that, then you have something special.
Read More: http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2012/football/ncaa/08/23/nebraska-1997/index.html#ixzz2ej5SeoKD

Adams: Mannings a treat to SEC’s fans

My hairline is receding and my hair is graying, so I hardly need ESPN to remind me how old I am.

Yet there I was this spring in a local hotel ballroom being interviewed by a producer from ESPN Classic. The subject was former University of Tennessee quarterback Peyton Manning, the son of a player I once covered.

Peyton is not even 30 and about to become a classic. It makes you wonder if the show will feature Peyton’s brother, Eli, before he’s 25.

The Peyton Manning biography is scheduled to air this month. That’s about 12 years too early for me.

I’m still reflecting on what Archie did.

He made the cover of Sports Illustrated, inspired “The Ballad of Archie Who?,” and played the game with such flair and prowess that even opposing fans sang his praises. Archie’s college football legacy isn’t just about Archie. It’s also about Peyton and Eli, the two sons who combined with their father to make the Mannings the first family of college football.

The first family will be missed this fall. For only the second time in 11 years, Archie Manning’s family won’t be represented by a quarterback on an SEC roster. The family’s college career ended in the Cotton Bowl when Eli played his last game for Ole Miss.

The Mannings’ college statistics are staggering. They passed for 26,073 yards and 201 touchdowns while winning over NFL scouts as well as fans. Archie was the second player taken in the 1971 NFL draft. Peyton (1998) and Eli (this spring) were the first players drafted.

“We’ve been blessed,” Archie said. “I’ve always felt very fortunate to have a chance to play SEC football. Then to have two sons accomplish what they did, I’m pretty shocked.”

The Mannings didn’t just excel in college football. They became legends. It was a matter of talent and timing.

When Archie became the starting quarterback as a sophomore at Ole Miss in 1968, the Rebels were no longer competing for national championships as they did in the late 1950s and early 60s under coach Johnny Vaught. Archie didn’t bring back the glory days, but on certain Saturdays he made Ole Miss as good and exciting as any team in the country.

Peyton’s place in UT lore was assured before his senior season. By then, he was already an All-American and surefire first-round draft pick. But when he chose to postpone his pro career and return for his senior season, he became the most popular player in UT history.

So much was made of Peyton not beating Florida and not winning the Heisman Trophy, it obscured how much he did win. With him at quarterback, the Vols finished in the top 10 for three consecutive seasons for the first time since 1950-52.

Peyton also turned the Alabama rivalry in UT’s favor. After failing to beat Alabama for nine consecutive years, the Vols beat Alabama three consecutive times with Manning at quarterback. Since his freshman season, UT is 8-1 against the Tide.

Peyton finished his career as the SEC’s all-time leader in passing yardage. His brother, Eli, is in third place although he didn’t start until his sophomore season.

Like his father, Eli succeeded in reviving Ole Miss football. Last year, the Rebels won 10 games for the first time in 32 years and came agonizingly close to winning their first West Division title since the conference began divisional play in 1992.

Before he ever won a game, Eli engendered newfound hope and optimism among Ole Miss fans, many of whom were disheartened, even resentful, when Peyton eschewed his father’s alma mater in favor of UT.

“It broke their hearts,” said Bo Ball, a longtime friend of Archie’s who played for the Rebels from 1958-60. “It broke my momma’s heart. They couldn’t believe it. But when Eli went there, the whole thing changed.”

Although it worked out beautifully, Archie had concerns about Eli going to Ole Miss.

“It scared me a little bit because I thought the expectations would be for Eli to go there and do what Peyton did at Tennessee,” Archie said. ” But I was proud of him. I thought it was kind of a courageous move for him to go there.

“Now, five years later, he’s had a wonderful college experience. And I wouldn’t take anything for Peyton’s four years at Tennessee. It doesn’t get any better than that.”

After Peyton went to UT, Archie remained a prominent fundraiser and booster for Ole Miss. With Eli at quarterback, Archie was back in the stands, as the television cameras invariably pointed out the last few years.

“He could have sat in a luxury box,” Ball said. “But he likes to be with the people.”

The people watching at home could see Eli on the field and Archie in the stands. The next day, they could see Peyton playing as well as any quarterback in the NFL.

For those old enough to remember Archie as a player, it was a classic sports weekend.

John Adams may be reached at 865-342-6284 or adamsj@knews.com.

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