Category Archives: Current Events

My uncle told me back in the 1980’s that the Vols would be better off with Pat Summitt coaching both the boys and girls teams!!!!

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Pat Summitt <!–

Pat Summitt

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Pat Summitt, flanked by former President Bill Clinton and Vice President Al Gore, speaks at the White House on Oct. 27, 1997, during a ceremony for Tennessee’s national championship win.
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I have enjoyed watching Pat Summitt’s career over the years. My great uncle Blythe Hatcher and his sister Sara Lou used to tell me that the Vols should stop trying to get men’s basketball coaches and just let Pat Summitt coach both the boys and girls teams. Looking at this record below makes me see what they were talking about. (From Wikipedia)

Awards and titles

  • 16-time SEC Champions (1980, 1985, 1990, 1993, 1994, 1995, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004,[7] 2007,[44]2010, 2011)
  • 15-time SEC Tournament Champions (1980, 1985, 1988, 1989, 1992, 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2011)[7]
  • 8-time SEC Coach of the Year (1983, 1995, 1998, 2001, 2003, 2004, 2007, 2011)[45]
  • 7-time NCAA Coach of the Year (1983, 1987, 1989, 1994, 1995, 1998, 2004)[7]
  • 8-time NCAA Champions (1987, 1989, 1991, 1996, 1997, 1998, 2007, 2008)[7]

Coach Pat Summitt orates during during a celebration of Tennessee's NCAA national championship with President George Bush on April 20, 1989 at the White House.

Photo by Michael Patrick

Coach Pat Summitt orates during during a celebration of Tennessee’s NCAA national championship with President George Bush on April 20, 1989 at the White House.

UT coach Pat Summitt hugs her son Tyler as the Lady Vols celebrate their seventh national title by defeating Rutgers 59-46 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, OH on April 4, 2007.

Photo by Saul Young

UT coach Pat Summitt hugs her son Tyler as the Lady Vols celebrate their seventh national title by defeating Rutgers 59-46 at the Quicken Loans Arena in Cleveland, OH on April 4, 2007.

Lady Vol coach Pat Summitt greets fans during a national championship celebration on April 1, 1991 at Thompson-Boling Arena. The Lady Vols won their third national title in five years with a 70-67 victory over Virginia.<br /><br /><br />

Photo by Connie Grosch, News Sentinel file photo

Lady Vol coach Pat Summitt greets fans during a national championship celebration on April 1, 1991 at Thompson-Boling Arena. The Lady Vols won their third national title in five years with a 70-67 victory over Virginia.

“Tennis Tuesday” David Wheaton (Part 1)

Testimony David Wheaton Tennis

Uploaded by on Sep 23, 2011

Testimony David Wheaton Tennis

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Wikipedia reports:

Country  United States
Residence Lake Minnetonka, Minnesota
Born June 2, 1969 (1969-06-02) (age 42)
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Height 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in)
Weight 84 kg (190 lb; 13.2 st)
Turned pro 1988
Retired 2001
Plays Right-handed
Career prize money US$5,238,401
Singles
Career record 232–191
Career titles 3
Highest ranking No. 12 (July 22, 1991)
Grand Slam results
Australian Open QF (1990)
French Open 3R (1995)
Wimbledon SF (1991)
US Open QF (1990)
Doubles
Career record 157–122
Career titles 3
Highest ranking No. 24 (June 24, 1991)
Last updated on: July 4, 2007.

1991 Wimbledon Jimmy Connors Michael Stich Boris Becker Final

Uploaded by on Feb 9, 2011

1991 Wimbledon Jimmy Connors David Wheaton Andre Agassi Michael Stich Boris Becker Final
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David Wheaton has an excellent show and website at www.Christianworldview.org Below is some material from his website:

Mission

The Christian Worldview has a two-fold mission: 1.) to help Christians develop a comprehensive biblical worldview about all matters of life and faith so that they, their families, and their churches will be strong, effective, God-glorifying ambassadors for Jesus Christ, and 2.) to share the good news that all people can be reconciled to God through repentance of sin and faith in Jesus Christ as their Savior and Lord.

This mission is pursued two ways:

  1. The Christian Worldview is a nationally-syndicated radio program hosted by David Wheaton that airs every Saturday from 8-9am Central Time on ~200 radio stations and is also available online via podcast, streaming, and TheChristianWorldview.org. Featuring compelling topics, notable guests, listener calls, and sound bites, the program focuses on current events, cultural issues, and matters of faith from a decidedly biblical perspective.
  2. TheChristianWorldview.org is an extensive website resource that provides audio, video, and written content from some of the most respected Christian leaders.

What is a Worldview?

A worldview is a personal collection of beliefs through which all of life is perceived and lived. There are several prominent worldviews — Christian, secular humanistic, Islamic, Hindu, Buddhist, New Age and others — including subsets of each and crossovers between two or more. Every person has a worldview.

The real question is: “Is your worldview true?” All worldviews are based on someone or something — a religious leader, philosopher, professor, writer, popular culture, organization, book, etc. The reason we believe the Christian worldview is worth following is because it is based on the Bible which claims to be entirely true and has never been proven otherwise.

Bad News – Good News

Rejection of the Christian worldview — or in other words, disobeying God’s will as written in the Bible, also known as sin — is ultimately the root cause of all the conflict and injustice within individuals, families, communities, nations, and the world.

The good news is that anyone who repents of their sin against God and places their faith or trust in His Son, Jesus Christ, as paying the required sacrifice for their sin and then follows Him as Lord, can be reconciled to God and then begin the life-long process of developing a Christian worldview to the praise and honor and glory of God.

Being in a right relationship with your Creator and then seeking to understand and live as He desires is the purpose of life. Hence our slogan: “Think Biblically, Live Accordingly.”

Until Christians are strengthened and non-Christians are reconciled,

David Wheaton, editor

What the new SEC football schedule might look like in 2013

I have been wondering what the result will be in the SEC football rotation in upcoming schedules after 2012. Basketball is working great and the old SEC football schedule rotation worked great but what are they going to do with the 14 schools now?

I think it will work best if they go to the one rivalry game between East and West (for instance, Alabama v. Tennessee in the famous 3rd Saturday in October rivalry) and then we could have one home game against the other division opponent and one road game with another one. However, both teams would rotate off the schedule every year.

This is the conclusion of this writer below from Chattanooga:

SEC could maintain Alabama-UT Vols tradition

Trent Richardson (3) runs through the line during of an NCAA college football game against the Alabama Crimson TideSaturday, Oct, 22 2011 in Tuscaloosa Ala. (AP Photo/John Bazmore)

Trent Richardson (3) runs through the line during of an NCAA college football game against the Alabama Crimson TideSaturday, Oct, 22 2011 in Tuscaloosa Ala. (AP Photo/John Bazmore)

Photo by Associated Press /Chattanooga Times Free Press.
 
 

A NEW WRINKLE


If the SEC’s cross-divisional rivalries are preserved on future football schedules, here is how they could look:

Alabama-Tennessee

Arkansas-Missouri

Auburn-Georgia

LSU-Florida

Ole Miss-Vanderbilt

Miss. State-Kentucky

Texas A&M-So. Carolina

The Southeastern Conference may have a home for traditionalists after all.

SEC athletic directors lobbying to maintain permanent cross-divisional football matchups such as Alabama-Tennessee and Auburn-Georgia feel better about their cause compared to a week ago. League ADs met last Wednesday in Nashville, the site of the SEC women’s basketball tournament, to begin discussing football schedules for the 2013 season and beyond, and they will resume talks Wednesday in New Orleans, the site of the men’s tournament.

Georgia athletic director Greg McGarity entered last week’s meeting fearing the 14 ADs might vote 10-4 against preserving permanent cross-divisional rivalries due to matchups such as Arkansas-South Carolina and Kentucky-Mississippi State not having the historical punch of Alabama-Tennessee and Auburn-Georgia.

“I do feel better,” McGarity said Sunday. “The tone of the conversations that everyone had sort of gave the impression that everyone had a sense, at least the majority had a sense, of liking the rivalry game with an opponent from the opposite division. The tone led us to believe that this has a good opportunity of moving forward.”

SEC associate commissioner Charles Bloom declined comment Sunday when asked about last week’s discussions.

The league is having to juggle concerns about traditional rivalries and members playing too infrequently as it moves from 12 teams following the additions of Missouri and Texas A&M. Missouri will compete in the East Division starting this year and Texas A&M in the West, and their arrivals instantly have altered the eight-game league format.

South Carolina president Harris Pastides told the ABC affiliate in Columbia on Saturday that he expects the permanent cross-divisional rivalries to remain but with a different look. The Gamecocks and Arkansas have met annually in football since 1992, when they gave the league a dozen members, but Pastides believes Arkansas will be replaced on his school’s schedule by Texas A&M.

“Arkansas and Missouri have kind of buddied up because they are neighboring states and wanted to play each other,” Pastides told station WOLO. “If all goes the way I think it will, we will probably be swapping Arkansas for Texas A&M.”

Pastides said an announcement on the new cross-divisional relationships could occur within a couple of weeks.

South Carolina and Texas A&M have never played in football, while Arkansas and Missouri have met just five times despite the proximity. Their most recent matchup occurred after the 2007 season, when the Tigers humiliated the Razorbacks 38-7 in the Cotton Bowl.

SEC athletic directors are studying models with eight and nine conference games, McGarity said, as well as ways to rotate the one opponent from the opposite division should ADs elect to maintain the format that was put in place for the 2012 season. One presented option that appears to have some traction is to play a rotating team from the opposite division at home one year and another rotating team from the opposite division away from home the next year, or vice versa, and go down the line.

Such a cycle would allow a fifth-year senior at a school the chance to see 12 of the 13 other league teams.

“I think everything is still on the table,” McGarity said. “We spent one full day on it, and I’m sure we’ll spend one full day on it in New Orleans once everybody’s had a week to think about it.”

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Loss to Vols is bitter in contrast to sweet victory in football

Photo by Adam Brimer, copyright © 2012 Tennessee guard Trae Golden (11) shoots a layup during the first half against Arkansas at Thompson-Boling Arena Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2012. (ADAM BRIMER/NEWS SENTINEL) ______________ I have to say that it was a sweet victory that the Hogs had over the Vols in football back in November. The […]

Vol Coach looks needs victory over Hogs on way to NCAA berth

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Vol coach “We’re getting there right now,” faces Arkansas on Wednesday

Florida’s Patric Young (4) goes to the basket as Tennessee’s Jarnell Stokes (5) tries to block the shot during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game in Gainesville, Fla., Saturday, Feb. 11, 2012. (AP Photo/Phil Sandlin) _____________________________ It appears the Arkansas Razorbacks will be facing a new and improved Tennessee Vols basketball team […]

When are the Razorbacks going to get road victory, maybe in Knoxville?

Arkansas must get a couple of road wins if we hope to make it to the NCAA Tournament this year. By reading the comments on Arkansas Sports 360 it appears the fans are anxious for one.  Looking at the schedule and there remains games at Tennessee, Auburn and Mississippi State. The Miss St game would […]

Briefs on all the SEC football recruiting hauls

I am glad that Petrino got more defensive players than offensive players but time will tell if he can develop these three star players like he did in 2008 when that class later turned the hogs into a national contender in 2011. Below is an article from http://www.ajc.com Alabama (26): The national champs added to their […]

Tennessee is upset at Peters for switching to the Hogs

It is nice to be feared by the Vols. They rejoiced when it was announced that they would not have to play the Hogs in 2012. Amy Smotherman Burgess, ©KNS/2011 In the article below you can see that the player who lived in Texas that switched to Texas could be explained away and the one […]

Arkansas gets help on defense in this class

I know that many of us are disappointed that Dorial Green-Beckham did not sign with the Razorbacks but we just have to move on. I am not interested in reliving the whole thing and going through all the negative things said about the Hogs during the process. That always happens in every recruiting case and […]

Tennessee forward Jeronne Maymon (34), right, fights for control of the ball during the game against Arkansas at Thompson-Boling Arena Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2012.  Tennessee won 77-58 over Arkansas.  (ADAM BRIMER/NEWS SENTINEL)

Photo by Adam Brimer, copyright © 2012

Tennessee forward Jeronne Maymon (34), right, fights for control of the ball during the game against Arkansas at Thompson-Boling Arena Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2012. Tennessee won 77-58 over Arkansas. (ADAM BRIMER/NEWS SENTINEL)

Tributes to Andrew Breitbart from Heritage Foundation Scholars (Part 3)

These comments below were taken from the following article:

Todd Thurman

March 1, 2012 at 3:21 pm

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Rory Cooper:  One of the last times I saw Andrew Breitbart, he was charging into a ballroom at the Washington Marriott at CPAC wearing a Guy Fawkes mask and cape. He loved it. He was there to promote a new film exposing the Occupy movement, and ever the showman; he knew how to make a grand entrance. Every face in the room got the same mischievous smirk on it when they saw him, as if to collectively say ‘that’s our Andrew’.

Andrew’s courageous legacy will be infinite. He showed young activists and journalists that the mainstream media will ignore many stories unless you make the lack of coverage embarrassing in itself. Make a spectacle, put your integrity on the line, inspire others and demand an open and honest debate. And when the media still gets it wrong, compete with them. Build your own website, do your own investigating and seek to shine a brilliant light on the important issues of our day.

Many will hopefully carry his torch, but nobody will replace him. He was *the* muckraker of a generation. The cause of truth and justice has suffered a great loss. My family’s prayers are with his wife and children who mourn the loss of a compassionate father and husband, and his countless friends who mourn the loss of a great soul.

Todd Thurman: I had the privilege to speak on a panel with Andrew Breitbart at our annual Resource Bank conference in 2009. He was truly dedicated to the movement. It was a 3 hour panel on a Friday afternoon in Los Angeles. Instead of enjoying the weather outside, he was in a hotel room speaking to bloggers to advance the cause. During the discussion, I noticed him constantly looking at his phone. I asked him what was going on and he told me: He was checking his fantasy baseball team. Whatever he was involved in, whether it was baseball, music, or the conservative movement, he was passionate. His passion burned until the very end and he will be truly missed.

Andrew Breitbart at CPAC 2012 02102012 – FULL SPEECH

Uploaded by on Feb 10, 2012

Courtesy of Mediaite via the Right Scoop.

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Rep. Louie Gohmert Pays Tribute to Andrew Breitbart Uploaded by GohmertTX01 on Mar 1, 2012 Rep. Louie Gohmert (TX-01) spoke on the House floor about the life and legacy of his friend, conservative writer and American patriot, Andrew Breitbart. “Thank you, dear God, for sharing this extraordinary gift that was Andrew Breitbart with us. We […]

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May 6, 2011 CBS News interview with Andrew Brietbart

Andrew Breitbart Andrew Breitbart CBS News reported on May 6, 2011: Conservative publisher Andrew Brietbart sat down for an extensive interview with CBSNews.com Friday in which he discussed his disdain for the mainstream media, offered his perspective on the Republican presidential field, said President Obama should have released a post-mortem photo of Osama bin Laden, and complained […]

Vols win SEC basketball championship

I have always admired Pat Summitt’s coaching ability and she did it again yesterday when the Vols won the SEC tournament championship again. Arkansas had a great team this year and even beat the Vols for the first time in Knoxville but the lady Razorbacks lost to LSU in the tournament.

Here is a link to the story from the Knoxville paper.

SAUL YOUNG/NEWS SENTINEL
From left, Tennessee Shekinna Stricklen, Ariel Massengale, and Glory Johnson run off the court in celebration after defeating LSU, 70-58 on Sunday in the SEC tournament championship game at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville.

Photo by Saul Young, copyright © 2012 // Buy this photo

SAUL YOUNG/NEWS SENTINEL From left, Tennessee Shekinna Stricklen, Ariel Massengale, and Glory Johnson run off the court in celebration after defeating LSU, 70-58 on Sunday in the SEC tournament championship game at Bridgestone Arena in Nashville.

Here are some other pictures from Pat Summitt’s career:

Lady Vol coach Pat Summitt celebrates winning the Mideast Regional title on April 23, 1991 at Thompson- Boling Arena. Tennessee defeated Auburn 69-65 and advanced to the Final Four in New Orleans.<br /><br />

Photo by Fritz Hoffmann, News Sentinel file photo

Lady Vol coach Pat Summitt celebrates winning the Mideast Regional title on April 23, 1991 at Thompson- Boling Arena. Tennessee defeated Auburn 69-65 and advanced to the Final Four in New Orleans.

The 1986 - 87 Lady Vols Championship team from left standing Graduate Assistant Heidi VanDerveer, Head Coach Pat Summitt, Cheryl Littlejohn, Jennifer Tuggle, Karla Horton, Sheila Frost, Carla McGhee, Kathy Spinks, Bridgette Gordon, Assistant Coach Holly Warlick, and Mickie DeMoss. Front row sitting from left are Gay Townson, Melissa McCray, Dawn Marsh, Lisa Webb, Shelley Sexton Collier, Tonya Edwards, and Sabrina Mott. </p><br />
<p>

Photo by Saul Young

The 1986 – 87 Lady Vols Championship team from left standing Graduate Assistant Heidi VanDerveer, Head Coach Pat Summitt, Cheryl Littlejohn, Jennifer Tuggle, Karla Horton, Sheila Frost, Carla McGhee, Kathy Spinks, Bridgette Gordon, Assistant Coach Holly Warlick, and Mickie DeMoss. Front row sitting from left are Gay Townson, Melissa McCray, Dawn Marsh, Lisa Webb, Shelley Sexton Collier, Tonya Edwards, and Sabrina Mott.
Tennessee head coach Pat Summitt raises her arm in celebration, after Tennessee defeated Stanford 64-48 for the NCAA National Championship at the St. Pete Time's Forum in Tampa, FL on April 8, 2008.<br /><br />

Photo by Saul Young

Tennessee head coach Pat Summitt raises her arm in celebration, after Tennessee defeated Stanford 64-48 for the NCAA National Championship at the St. Pete Time’s Forum in Tampa, FL on April 8, 2008.

Lady Vols head coach Pat Summitt leads the cheers after winning the Women's NCAA National Championship 67-44 against Louisiana Tech on March 29, 1987 in Austin , TX. Celebrating with Summitt are players, from left, Melissa McCary, Kathy Spinks, Bridgette Gordon, and Dawn Marsh. The victory earned the Lady Vols their first national championship.<br /><br />

Photo by J. Miles Cary

Lady Vols head coach Pat Summitt leads the cheers after winning the Women’s NCAA National Championship 67-44 against Louisiana Tech on March 29, 1987 in Austin , TX. Celebrating with Summitt are players, from left, Melissa McCary, Kathy Spinks, Bridgette Gordon, and Dawn Marsh. The victory earned the Lady Vols their first national championship.

Tributes to Andrew Breitbart from Heritage Foundation Scholars (Part 2)

These comments below were taken from the following article:

Todd Thurman

March 1, 2012 at 3:21 pm

_________

Ernest Istook:  When Andrew Breitbart discovered his passion, he pursued it relentlessly.  Simply put, he hated bullies and made it his mission to expose them, in particular the bullying tactics of the left.  He relished challenging political correctness.

Beneath his aggressive exterior, Breitbart cared deeply for his family and friends and sought to protect them from what liberal bullying is doing to America.  His loyalty was immense.

Andrew was just as open about himself as the openness he asked of others.  When I invited him to lecture in a study group I taught at Harvard’s Institute of Politics, he not only embraced the opportunity but spent many extra hours with the students, infusing them with his passion.

Andrew Breitbart was unselfish with his time and energy.  His example and his leadership will be missed.  As Breitbart’s legacy, he would expect us to be bold.

Brian Darling: I am deeply saddened at the passing of Andrew Breitbart.  I met him when he was in the initial stages of setting up his Big Government web site and I was later approved to be a blogger for it.  Over the years, I would see him at events and we would chat.  We had made plans late last year to get together to discuss ways to take the fight to the left.

I was a regular panelist on Fox Business’ Follow the Money with Eric Bolling.  Andrew was on the show in early December of last year and I sent him an E-Mail about his interview on the show.  As usual, Andrew was a great guest and was very excited to make points about the failed policy of bailing out private enterprise.  I shot him an E-Mail making fun of “Government Motors” – the topic of the segment.  Andrew responded with “see ya next time I get to DC.  We need to touch base, scheme a bit!”  Sadly that was the last communication I had with Andrew.  I missed him at CPAC inWashington,DC a few weeks ago and will forever be saddened that I did not have one last chance to run into him to say hello and scheme.

He shall be missed.

Uploaded by on Mar 1, 2012

Sean Hannity – In My Fathers House There Are Many Mansion And I Know Andrew Is In One Of Them

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Andrew Breitbart Andrew Breitbart CBS News reported on May 6, 2011: Conservative publisher Andrew Brietbart sat down for an extensive interview with CBSNews.com Friday in which he discussed his disdain for the mainstream media, offered his perspective on the Republican presidential field, said President Obama should have released a post-mortem photo of Osama bin Laden, and complained […]

“Music Monday” The Monkees (Part 1)

Davy Jones was a great singer and we will miss him.

Jones, 66, born in Manchester, England, became the principal teen idol of the rock quartet featured on the NBC comedy series “The Monkees,” which was inspired in part by the Beatles film “A Hard Day’s Night” and ran from the fall of 1966 to August of 1968.

Although not allowed to play their own instruments on their early records, Jones and his three cohorts – Micky Dolenz, Michael Nesmith and Peter Tork – had several hits that sold millions of copies, including “Last Train to Clarksville” and “I’m a Believer.”

(Reporting by Christine Kearney; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Greg McCune and Vicki Allen)

Davy Jone of The Monkees has died of a heart attack,The Monkees which was put together in 1965 for the TV show of the same name. Their hits included “Daydream Believer,” “Last Train to Clarksville,” “I’m a Believer,” and “Pleasant Valley Sunday.” They also charted with the theme song from the show.
In 2008, Yahoo Music named him the top teen idol of all time.
After “The Monkees” disbanded in 1971, Jones sang solo as well as with various reincarnations of the group.

He also acted on stage and screen, with his most famous TV appearance as himself on “The Brady Bunch,” in an episode where Marcia Brady was the president of his fan club and tried to get the singer to appear at her school dance. He also played Fagin in “Oliver!” on Broadway.
Recently, he played himself on an episode of “Sponge Bob Square Pants.”
He released his final album in 2009

____________

Davy Jones from The Monkees-The O’Reilly Factor-Bill OReilly

Uploaded by on Jun 16, 2007

Davy Jones of The Monkees sits down with Bill O’Reilly on The O’Reilly Factor to discuss Jann Wenner and the Rock and Rock Hall of Fame Contraversy.

Remembering Andrew Breitbart

Andrew made a big impact in a few short years.

Ed Feulner

March 1, 2012 at 10:45 am

It was with great sadness that I heard this morning Andrew Breitbart passed away from natural causes at the young age of 43. Our first thoughts turn to his family: his wife Susie and his four children. He loved them with the same passion he had for his crusades on behalf of freedom. The prayers of the Heritage family are with them.

This is a loss for the entire country. The cause of truth and freedom will be without one of its biggest champions.

Andrew was fearless. He took on the entrenched powers of liberalism in this country, whether they were in the media, academia, unions or elsewhere, with a zest that was infectious. He had the unmistakable mark of a leader, showing others where they needed to do battle through the force of his own example.

Andrew was also an intellectual, though, and that is indeed a very rare combination. In his last book, properly titled “Righteous Indignation: Excuse Me While I Save the World,” he shined a needed light on the origins of the leftist threat to our freedoms. One such example was the FrankfurtSchool, a mid-20th century invasion of European Marxist academics who realized that taking over our universities would be the first step in seizing our brightest minds. I remember him sitting with me in my office while he was conducting this research and telling me with his trademark fascination about all he was finding out.

But Andrew was eminently a doer, not an armchair intellectual. He will be perhaps best remembered for taking on liberals in the mainstream media, not just by exposing their corrupt biases while claiming impartiality, but by giving them competition through his Big Journalism, Big Government and Big Hollywood websites.

We all mourn Andrew today, but we can’t allow our sorrow to consume us. The challenge for us, for all conservatives, is to react to today’s sad event by following his example, by picking up the sword that lies on the ground before us.

___________

Mark Levin Gives You Memories From The Bunker In His Tribute To Andrew Breitbart

Uploaded by on Mar 1, 2012

Mark Levin Gives You Memories From The Bunker In His Tribute To Andrew Breitbart

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Rush Limbaugh’s Moving Tribute To Andrew Breitbart Uploaded by MrTimotheus85 on Mar 1, 2012 Rush Limbaugh’s Moving Tribute To Andrew Breitbart Related posts: Sean Hannity’s tribute to his dear friend Andrew Breitbart March 1, 2012 – 3:03 pm Uploaded by MrTimotheus85 on Mar 1, 2012 Sean Hannity – In My Fathers House There Are Many Mansion […]

Andrew Breitbart at CPAC 2012 02102012 – FULL SPEECH

Andrew Breitbart at CPAC 2012 02102012 – FULL SPEECH Uploaded by bydesign001 on Feb 10, 2012 Courtesy of Mediaite via the Right Scoop. Related posts: Sean Hannity’s tribute to his dear friend Andrew Breitbart March 1, 2012 – 3:03 pm Uploaded by MrTimotheus85 on Mar 1, 2012 Sean Hannity – In My Fathers House There Are […]

Uploaded by MrTimotheus85 on Mar 1, 2012 Sean Hannity – In My Fathers House There Are Many Mansion And I Know Andrew Is In One Of Them I got a chance to meet Andrew once and it was on May 25, 2011. He was very gracious and I really enjoyed visiting with him. Below are […]

Rep. Louie Gohmert Pays Tribute to Andrew Breitbart

Rep. Louie Gohmert Pays Tribute to Andrew Breitbart Uploaded by GohmertTX01 on Mar 1, 2012 Rep. Louie Gohmert (TX-01) spoke on the House floor about the life and legacy of his friend, conservative writer and American patriot, Andrew Breitbart. “Thank you, dear God, for sharing this extraordinary gift that was Andrew Breitbart with us. We […]

Andrew Breitbart spoke to Little Rock, Arkansas group May 25, 2011 (Part 4,the media world has changed with cable, Fox News, and the web)

Andrew Breibart spoke in Little Rock on May 25, 2011 Andrew Breitbart in Arkansas The second monthly luncheon with featured speaker Andrew Breitbart was excellent. (Check out the Tolbert Report for more coverage of this event.) First, we got to hear from Dave Elswick of KARN   who came up with the idea of this luncheon, […]

Andrew Breitbart spoke to Little Rock, Arkansas group May 25, 2011 (Part 3,one time default cultural liberal, but now a conservative )

Andrew Breibart spoke in Little Rock on May 25, 2011 Andrew Breitbart in Arkansas Dave Elswick Chicago and Introduction.wmv Conservative film activist Andrew Breitbart spoke in Little Rock on Wednseday May 25th at the Hilton Hotel. The room was packed with conservative activist and Tea Party members. Breitbart talked about dealing with the liberal media […]

Andrew Breitbart spoke to Little Rock, Arkansas group May 25, 2011 (Part 2, video clips )

Andrew Breibart spoke in Little Rock on May 25, 2011 to a packed room. The second monthly luncheon with featured speaker Andrew Breitbart was excellent. (Check out the Tolbert Report for more coverage of this event.) First, we got to hear from Dave Elswick of KARN   who came up with the idea of this luncheon, […]

Andrew Breitbart spoke to Little Rock, Arkansas group May 25, 2011 (Part 1, taking on Bill Maher was liberating)

  Andrew Breitbart speaking in Little Rock on May 25, 2011. Andrew Breitbart – Taking Down the Corrupt and Biased, Leftist Mainstream Media Andrew Breitbart joined Hannity to talk about his new book “Righteous Indignation: Excuse Me While I Save the World!”, and about his mission to take down the corrupt and biased, leftist mainstream […]

May 6, 2011 CBS News interview with Andrew Brietbart

Andrew Breitbart Andrew Breitbart CBS News reported on May 6, 2011: Conservative publisher Andrew Brietbart sat down for an extensive interview with CBSNews.com Friday in which he discussed his disdain for the mainstream media, offered his perspective on the Republican presidential field, said President Obama should have released a post-mortem photo of Osama bin Laden, and complained […]

“Sproul Sunday” RC Sproul: Four Steps Backwards – Defending Your Faith Part 4

I got this off the internet and really got a lot out of it.

Uploaded by on Jan 6, 2012

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MESSAGE INTRODUCTION
Epistemology is the study of how people know what they know. There have been many approaches to this, and some utterly fail to give any certitude to us in the areas of faith.
Why do some theories of knowledge fail and others succeed? And why is this important to Christianity? This study begins to answer that question by establishing four nonnegotiable presuppositions about knowledge.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES
1. To value the science of epistemology.
2. To become familiar with the terms surrounding elementary epistemology.
3. To apply the four basic principles of knowledge to our own ideas and the ideas presented to us by the world.

QUOTATIONS AND THOUGHTS
Argument: An argument consists of one or more premises and one conclusion. A premise is a statement (a sentence that is either true or false) that is offered in support of the claim being made, which is the conclusion.
The latter is also an idea that is either true or false.

LECTURE OUTLINE
I. What is epistemology?

a. How do we know what we know? How can we verify or falsify claims of truth?
b. Do we know only through senses or mind? Or formal proofs, such as mathematics?
c. As this relates to apologetics, it raises the question of what the “real” way is to prove the existence of God, the way that carries the most certitude.

II. Epistemology and Apologetics

a. How do the opponents of theism establish their negative case against the Christian faith? Almost all attack four foundational principles of knowing:-
i. Law of Non-Contradiction
ii. Law of Causality
iii. Basic Reliability of Sense Perception
iv. Analogical Use of Language
b) Certain presuppositions or assumptions must be analyzed concerning these four ideas. We do this by asking:-
i. What premises are asserted by opponents?
ii. What premises are assumed by Scripture?
iii. If these four concepts are negotiable, then not only theology but all sciences are rendered moot, or, at best, unreliable.

III. Conclusion: There is an analogy between Creator and creature that makes the epistemological assumptions of God our own.

Heritage Foundation and the Blunt Amendment

Sandra Fluke and the Blunt Amendment have been getting a lot of attention lately and Max Brantley has jumped on this too.

Mike Brownfield

March 1, 2012 at 8:51 am

Since 1791, when the Bill of Rights was formally adopted, America has enjoyed the legal protection of religious freedom, enshrined in the U.S. Constitution. Today, 221 years later, centuries of progress in the protection of religious and other liberties is at risk of being rolled back in one fell swoop. The culprit: Obamacare.

As we all know, President Obama’s health care law will mandate that religious hospitals, charities, and schools abandon the tenets of their faiths and provide their employees insurance coverage of abortion-inducing drugs, contraception and sterilization. This anti-conscience mandate is but the latest assault on liberty Obamacare has ushered in. Its shock waves are reverberating across the country, waking Americans to the fact that our first freedom — religious liberty — will be the first to fall now that the federal government has unfettered control over the country’s health care system.

Some in Congress are taking action to combat Obamacare’s onslaught. Today, the Senate will consider an amendment introduced by Senator Roy Blunt (R-Missouri) and co-sponsored by Marco Rubio (R-Florida) that would override Obamacare’s anti-conscience mandate, allowing religious institutions to keep their faith and provide health care coverage for their employees. So important is this amendment that The Heritage Foundation’s sister organization, Heritage Action for America, has decided to “key vote” the measure, meaning that it has identified the vote as a seminal one.

The importance of this moment has, of course, been lost on Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) who derided the effort to protect the First Amendment guarantee of free exercise of religion. Yesterday he said, “It’s hard to understand why my Republican colleagues think this topic deserves to be debated in the first place.” Meanwhile, the likes of Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) and Al Franken (D-MN) have attempted to paint the Blunt Amendment as an attack on women and women’s health, willfully ignoring the rights of hundreds of millions of Americans to practice religion without interference from the state — a right so fundamental to human nature that the Founding Fathers put it in the First Amendment.

Liberals in the House have, too, tried to distort the issue and recast it as a question of women’s health, not religious liberty. This week, the House Democratic Steering and Policy Committee welcomed Georgetown law student and “reproductive rights activist” Sandra Fluke to share her story of woe, telling Congress that her peers are going broke buying birth control – despite managing to come up with $46,000 a year for tuition at one of the pre-eminent law schools in the country.

Let’s make this clear one more time: The issue isn’t about birth control — it’s about the federal government’s power to force a religious institution like Georgetown University to bend to its will and take actions that are fundamentally at odds with its core values. Religious groups are faced with an untenable choice: violate conscience or drop coverage and face penalties for doing so. That’s why so many Americans — men and women alike — are speaking out against the anti-conscience mandate and its fine on faith.

On Monday at The Heritage Foundation, a panel of women of diverse backgrounds gathered to voice their opposition to the Administration’s actions. One of those women, Lori Windham, senior counsel for the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, stated, “We have a Constitution that protects the religious freedom of these organizations. It protects the religious freedom of the women and the men in these organizations, and they’re just asking that they be able to continue enjoying that religious freedom. This mandate hurts religious organizations. It hurts the people they serve. It’s unconstitutional.”

On Tuesday, the House Judiciary Committee also heard testimony on the impact of the mandate, with attorney Becket attorney, Asma Uddin, explaining:

As a Muslim-American woman and an academic, I have spent my career fighting for women’s and minorities’ rights, and the fact that I must be here today to explain why our constitutional rights exist is extremely offensive to me personally. . . Women, too, seek the freedom to live in accordance with their sincerely held religious beliefs. Religious freedom is a right enjoyed by everyone, and it is just as much in women’s interest to protect that right as it is in men’s.

Beyond religious freedom, Obamacare lands another unconstitutional blow against liberty in America with its unconstitutional individual mandate to buy health insurance. A judgment on that awaits the action of the Supreme Court. Together, the two dictates — and the others to follow under Obamacare — should be a sign to Americans that the federal government is reaching an event horizon — a point of no return — beyond which individuals will be forever subsumed to the will of the state. Once this door is knocked down, the rights the Constitution protects will be stamped with an asterisk that disclaims, “subject to the will of the federal government.” This is where Obamacare has brought our country. Today, Congress should take action to protect the very first of those Constitutional protections, and then it should get to work in repealing Obamacare.

Click here to watch our new video, Religious Liberty: Obamacare’s First Casualty, to learn more about this issue.

Quick Hits:

  • Two U.S. soldiers were shot dead in Afghanistan at the hands of three assailants, two of whom were believed to be Afghan soldiers. Six Americans have been killed since the burning of Korans at a U.S. base.
  • Democrat lobbyists are warning their corporate clients that contributions to Republican challengers could mean not-so-nice consequences from the powers that be in Congress, according to a Politico report.
  • Britain has closed its embassy in Damascus, Syria, as the Assad government continues its assault on opposition groups. The U.N. Human Rights Council voted to condemn Syria’s actions.
  • Bank of America is considering imposing monthly fees on customers unless they agree to bank online, buy more products, or maintain certain balances. Last fall, the bank ditched plans to impose a $5 debit card fee in order to recoup costs from the Dodd-Frank regulatory reform bill.
  • What is the future of warfare in our socially networked world? Heritage’s James Carafano examines the effects of digital communications on national security and diplomacy in a special event tomorrow from 12 to 1 PM ET. Click here to watch online.