Category Archives: Current Events

Celebrating the Constitution with Heritage Foundation

Brandon Stewart wrote an excellent article on the founding of the constitution:

This weekend America will celebrate Constitution Day, created to honor the signing of the U.S. Constitution on September 17, 1787, by the Constitutional Convention. Earlier this week, former Attorney General Ed Meese reflected on the importance ordinary citizens can play in preserving our Constitution:

The Constitution of the United States of America has endured over two centuries. It remains the object of reverence for nearly all Americans and an object of admiration by peoples around the world. Unfortunately, the assault by 20th century liberal theorists and activist judges has seriously undermined respect for America’s core principles, denigrating some constitutional rights they disagree with and making up others. Fortunately, there has been a renewed interest in the Constitution in recent years, as Americans seek to understand the founding principles and enduring truths that form the bedrock of our chosen form of self-government. Clearly, the future of liberty depends on America reclaiming its constitutional first principles.

As Meese explains, this was something President Ronald Reagan keenly understood. In a 1981 proclamation, Reagan explained the paramount importance of an engaged public:

Daniel Webster once wrote, “We may be tossed upon an ocean where we can see no land — nor, perhaps, the sun or stars. But there is a chart and a compass for us to study, to consult, and to obey. The chart is the Constitution.” September 17, 1981, marks the 194th anniversary of our Constitution. Its Framers scarcely could have conceived of the timelessness of the document they so carefully drafted. They prepared a Constitution to meet the needs of a fledgling nation. Yet today, amid the complexities of the twentieth century, that same Constitution, with only several amendments, serves a nation whose territory spans a continent and whose population exceeds two hundred and twenty-five million. With the passing of each year, it becomes increasingly evident that, in the words of Chief Justice John Marshall, our Constitution will “endure for ages to come.”

The Constitution establishes the Congress, the Executive, and the Judiciary, and through a deliberate allocation of authority, it defines the limits of each upon the others. It particularizes the liberties which, as free men and women, we insist upon, and it constrains both Federal and State powers to ensure that those precious liberties are faithfully protected. It is our blueprint for freedom, our commitment to ourselves and to each other.

It is by choice, not by imposition, that the Constitution is the supreme law of our Land. As we approach the bicentennial of this charter, each of us has a personal obligation to acquaint ourselves with it and with its central role in guiding our Nation. While a constitution may set forth rights and liberties, only the citizens can maintain and guarantee those freedoms. Active and informed citizenship is not just a right; it is a duty.

So this weekend, take a moment to read the Constitution, watch and share our video, take our short quiz, and reflect on the ways we can all work to promote this amazing document.

Brandon Stewart

As digital communications associate, Brandon Stewart blogs for The Foundry, assists with social media efforts, and produces a wide variety of videos

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 2)

Coldplay

This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference:

My son Hunter is a coldplay nut and his 19th favorite song is “Glass of Water.”

The whole album is very interesting and I have written about it before. The subject of death is prominent in the songs “Poppyfields,” “Violet Hill,” “Death and All His Friends,” “42,” and the “Cemeteries of London.” Then the song “The Escapist” states, “And in the end, We lie awake and we dream, we’re makin our escape.” In the end we all die. Therefore, I assume this song is searching for an afterlife to escape to. The song “Glass of Water” sheds some more light on where we possibly escape to: “Oh he said you could see a future inside a glass of water, with riddles and the rhymes, He asked ‘Will I see heaven in mine?’

Coldplay is clearly searching for spiritual answers but it seems they have not found them quite yet. The song “42“: “Time is so short and I’m sure, There must be something more.” Then the song “Lost“: “Every river that I tried to cross, Every door I ever tried was locked, I’m just waiting til the shine wears off, You might be a big fish in a little pond, Doesn’t mean you’ve won, Because along may come a bigger one and you will be lost.”
Solomon went to the extreme in his searching in the Book of Ecclesiastes for this “something more” that Coldplay is talking about, but he did not find any satisfaction in pleasure (2:1), education (2:3), work (2:4), wealth (2:8) or fame (2:9). All of his accomplishments would not be remembered (1:11) and who is to say that they had not already been done before by others (1:10)? This reminds me of the big fish in the little pond that Coldplay was talking about. Even if you think you are on top, are you really? Also Solomon’s upcoming death depressed him because both people and animals alike “go to the same place — they came from dust and they return to dust” (3:20).  The answer to this problem is given at the end of the Book of Ecclesiastes.

The Best Coldplay Songs Of All Time – And Why?

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No one can argue that Coldplay is one of the best bands of today. Their music has been spread across the globe from the US to Canada, Australia to New Zealand, England to France and many more. Personally, I’m a huge Coldplay fan and when the question of “what are the best Coldplay songs of all time” came up amongst a few friends of mine while playing Rock Band it got the cogs in mind thinking…

I decided that there were too many great Coldplay songs so I narrowed it down to just five. Here’s what I came up with…

Trouble

Trouble is the song that made me fall in love with the band. A great starting piano tune that not only delivers an excellent chorus but then tops that with a remarkable ending. Not too many songs these days change total direction at the end and give their listeners something more at the finale. A gorgeous video combining stop-motion and digital effects. If you’re unfamiliar with Coldplay’s music then this is a great place to start.

Speed of Sound

Great beat. Great lyrics. Again, you have a beautiful piano part starting the song off. Where “Trouble” is a steady horse from start to end, Speed of Sound is more like a gallop that increases as the song progresses. Just when you think they’ve drawn you in with the ultimate hook they continue to deliver hook after hook in this song. And not just in the vocals. The guitars and piano are all throwing in their cool little hooky riffs. Its kinda like one of those russian dolls that you keep opening up to more and more cute little dolls. This song is guaranteed to fill your musical palette over and over again.

In My Place

In My Place starts with a rockin drum line with kick, snare and hi-hat by the ever-talented “Will Champion”. Then a beautiful guitar line comes in with Jonny Buckland leading us through the whole song. This is the first hook we hear in the song, played in the upper registers of the guitar with a combination of arpeggios and melodic note choices. I always find it funny to hear instruments in a song that don’t show up in the video. If you listen closely you’ll hear a gentle organ playing its way through the verse but in the video it’s not featured. And once again Chris does an amazing job coming up with the best hooks in the chorus providing not only a great Pop/Rock tune but a memorable song that will last through the times.

Clocks

I don’t think any piano line has been played more than the one from Clocks. You’ll not only hear this song in every romantic movie out there but the piano hook itself has been dissected from the song just to be featured by itself in many movies and tv shows. The song is a basic 4/4 form but what’s great is how they divide the meter. A constant division of 3-3-2 driving you throughout the entirety of the song. It provides not only a great rock feel but with such a rhythm it’s guaranteed you’ll find yourself alone in your room dancing like a freak until your mum walks in on you embarrassing you in the process.

The Scientist

No other song by Coldplay gives me goosebumps like The Scientist. A sweet and nostalgic tune that enjoys a long intro with Chris Martin on vocals and piano. It’s not until the 1:38 mark does the full band finally come in. That’s a big no no in the Pop world. You see, by Pop standards you’re supposed to hit the full chorus by at least the first 30 seconds. But that’s perhaps what I love about this song. They manage to go outside that box and provide a moving a wonderful musical tale. In the July 14th, 2005 edition of Rolling Stone magazine, Chris Martin is quoted as saying:”On the second album I was thinking there was something missing. I was in this really dark room in Liverpool, and there was a piano so old and out of tune. I really wanted to try and work out the George Harrison song ‘Isn’t It A Pity,’ but I couldn’t. Then this song came out at once. I said, ‘Can you turn on the recorder?’ The first time I sung it is what’s out there.”

Whether you agree with my choice for the best Coldplay songs of all time or not, there’s no disputing that they are one of the greatest bands of all time.

Related posts:

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 4)

Dave Hogan/ Getty Images This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference: For the 17th best Coldplay song of all-time, Hunter picks “42.” He notes, “You thought you might […]

Documentary on Coldplay (Part 2)

The best band in the world. Below I have linked some articles I have earlier about the search for meaning in life the band seems to involved in. Chris Martin, Jonny Buckland, Guy Berryman, and Will Champion formed Coldplay in 1996 while going to University in London. The young band quickly established themselves in the […]

Review of New Coldplay song with video clip

I am presently involved in the counting down of the best Coldplay songs of all time, but I am also in a series here reviewing the upcoming songs on Coldplay’s new cd that will be released soon. Here is a review from Rolling Stone: Coldplay Debut new song ‘Charlie Brown’ June 6, 2011 Coldplay debuted […]

Documentary on Coldplay (Part 1, the song “Yellow” featured)

Great documentary on Coldplay. I have written a lot on Coldplay the last few years and I see something spiritually happening with the group as they continue to search for a deeping meaning in life. Coldplay Max Masters – Part 1 of 7 Uploaded by thepostbox on May 6, 2009 The ASTRA Award winning music documentary […]

“Woody Wednesday” Will Allen and Martin follow same path as Kansas to Christ?

Several members of the 70′s band Kansas became committed Christians after they realized that the world had nothing but meaningless to offer. It seems through the writings of both Woody Allen and Chris Martin of Coldplay that they both are wrestling with the issue of death and what meaning does life bring. Kansas went through […]

“Music Monday”:Coldplay’s best songs of all time (Part 3)

 This is “Music Monday” and I always look at a band with some of their best music. I am currently looking at Coldplay’s best songs. Here are a few followed by another person’s preference:   Hunter has chosen the song “Viva La Vida” as his number 18 pick. Hunter noted, “The violin synth is a […]

Review of New Coldplay songs (video clip too)

Coldplay – Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall Published on Jun 28, 2011 by ColdplayVEVO The new single, taken from Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall EP (featuring two more new tracks). Download it from http://cldp.ly/itunescp Music video by Coldplay performing Every Teardrop Is A Waterfall. (P) 2011 The copyright in this audiovisual recording is owned by […]

 

Two amazing actresses: Sisters Joan Fontaine and Olivia de Haviland

Last night I watched the movie “Suspicion” with Joan Fontaine. 

 

 

Feuding Sisters: Olivia de Havilland & Joan Fontaine

Over the years, the Academy has recognized acting families, with awards bestowed upon siblings, parents and children, and even cousins.  The Huston’s, the Fonda’s, the Coppola’s, and the Redgrave’s, are among the acting families, who have multiple awards amongst them.  But perhaps the most interesting, would be that duo of feuding sisters, who’s private infighting, became Hollywood gossip, and who would butt heads at the Oscar ceremonies on more than one occasion! 


Olivia de Havilland and Joan Fontaine were both army brats, two sisters born one year apart in Tokyo , where their father was stationed, back in 1916-17.  The girls suffered from ill-health, forcing the parents to move to California when they were young.  During that time, their parents divorced, and their father returned to Tokyo.

The sisters admit that growing up together, that they fought constantly.  According to Fontaine, elder sister, Olivia never got used to the idea of a younger sister, and thus a jealous rivalry was begun.  Their fighting was so bitter as children, that it often resulted in fist fighting, as much as it did petty squabbling.

Olivia was the first to venture into acting, taking the stage in the early thirties.  Sister Joan followed suit a few years later.  

As they were both being courted for contracts with movie studios, Joan changed her name to Fontaine,  supposedly on the advice of a fortune teller.  While Joan started to work her way up the ranks of RKO, playing smaller roles to Katherine Hepburn and Joan Crawford, Olivia was signed with Warner’s, playing high profile roles in Robin Hood and in several Bette Davis films.  

By 1939, Olivia had made a name for herself, so much so, that she was a popular choice with fans, and with casting agents, to play Melanie, in the classic, Gone With the Wind. Olivia earned her first nomination for Best Supporting Actress, playing the ultra-pure wife of the man that Scarlett O’Hara is hot-to-trot for.

Of course, the award would ultimately be handed out to her co-star, Hattie McDaniel, the first black actress to ever win the award, but that fact didn’t console de Havilland.  She later admitted, that for at least two weeks after her defeat, she was convinced that ‘there was no God.’  She admitted that on the night that McDaniel won,  she ‘couldn’t stay at that table another minute.  I had to be alone, so I wandered out into the kitchen and cried.’  She said that it took a few days before she could finally be ‘proud’ that she “belonged to a profession which honored a black woman who merited this, in a time when other groups had neither the honesty, nor the courage to do the same sort of thing.”

The very next year, David Selznick was looking for a vehicle to follow up his success on Gone With the Wind.  He chose Rebecca, and gave newcomer, Alfred Hitchcock free reign to direct.  Hitchcock cast the other sister, Joan, in the lead role of the meek and mild, second Mrs. de Winter.  The film was a success, garnering yet another Best Picture win for Selznick’s camp.  Meanwhile, Joan was suddenly a big star, and found herself nominated for her first Best Actress Award.

Despite raving reviews by the critics, and a huge fan base that was gunning for her, Joan didn’t win that year.  Instead, the award went to Ginger Rogers, who was perhaps being honored for a decade worth of fine work in classic musicals and comedies, rather than for the second grade weepy, Kitty Foyle, for which she was nominated.  Fontaine was gracious about losing, stating that ‘to have won for my first good role, would have been precipitous.’ 

The 1941 Oscar’s marked the first round in the battle of the feuding sisters, when both of them were nominated for the Best Actress Oscar.  Joan received the nod for Suspicion, her second film with Alfred Hitchcock directing her, while Olivia was recognized for Hold Back the Dawn.  

Joan actually didn’t plan on attending the ceremony, stating that she had to be up early the next morning, however, older sister, Olivia twisted her arm, stating, “You have to be there.  Your absence would look odd.”

Gingers Rogers presented the Best Actress award, while the two sisters sat next to each other at the Selznick table.  When she called out Joan’s name, Joan remembers how she just froze.  “Get up there,” her sister nudged.  Joan remembers bursting into tears at that very moment.  “All the animus we felt toward each other as children,” she recalled.  “The hair pulling, the savage wrestling matches, the time Olivia fractured my collar bone, all came rushing back in kaleidoscopic imagery.  My paralysis was total … I felt age four, being confronted by my older sister.  Damn it!  I incurred her wrath again.”

Here is a picture of her in Suspicion above.


The two games I saw this week (Tenn at Florida, Troy at Arkansas) jh21

This weekend I got to see two games on TV. I wanted to make a few comments about both games. Arkansas finally put away Troy 38-28 and Florida finally put away Tennessee 33-23.

I told my kids that Arkansas was going to be facing a tough opponent this week in Troy. Harry King agreed evidently:

Well-informed Razorback fans, here’s a trivia question: What four opposing quarterbacks are on the Davey O’Brien watch list?

Thinking cap on, I came up with Texas A&M’s Ryan Tannehill, Tennessee’s Tyler Bray and Mississippi State’s Chris Relf. Knowing the watch list was released in mid-July, Alabama, Auburn and LSU were eliminated because the quarterback situation at those schools was unsettled at the time.

South Carolina’s oft-suspended Stephen Garcia was the red herring.

The final member of the quartet is Troy’s Corey Robinson, who will have an opportunity to show off this evening in Fayetteville. Two-thirds of the 38 on the watch list are from the six BCS conferences and five are from Conference USA where pass defense is prohibited, so Robinson had to have some credentials to be recognized from the Sun Belt Conference.

As a freshman last year, he completed almost 64 percent of his 505 passes for 3,726 yards with 28 touchdowns and 15 interceptions.

Don’t assume Robinson feasted on Sun Belt opposition. He was 28-of-38 in a 41-38 loss to Oklahoma State, 58 percent or better against three other non-conference foes and 32-of-42 for 387 in a New Orleans Bowl victory over Ohio.

Two weeks ago, in Troy’s only game of the year, he was 24-of-42 against Clemson. Troy led the Tigers 16-13 at the half.

___________________________

The Tennessee game showed me that Bray is the real deal. I actually think that Tennesse may be the toughest game that Arkansas has at home this year. Some people would argue it is South Carolina, but I am picking Vandy to beat them this week. Miss St is very good but will they be able to recover from starting 0-2 in the SEC?

The other SEC home game for Arkansas is Auburn and with the defeat this week at Clemson it proves that Auburn will lucky to finish 4-4 in the SEC conference play this year. I think Tennessee will be a surprising dark horse in the East and probably the toughest team Arkansas will face this year at home. We will have to wait and see.

Below is a negative view of Tennessee’s game yesterday from Knoxnews.com:

Quarterbacks: B-

Tyler Bray had one of his first mistakes of the season, and it proved to be a big one. The sophomore’s interception to start the second half led directly to points and put UT in a hole it couldn’t climb out of without Justin Hunter at receiver.

Running backs: C-

Tauren Poole was a non-factor, and Marlin Lane didn’t provide much more on the ground. Lane did add another touchdown to his growing resume and was productive out of the backfield as a receiver.

Wide receivers/ tight ends: B

Losing Hunter early was a critical blow to the offense, but it did give Vincent Dallas and DeAnthony Arnett a chance to make an impact. Both got involved in the passing game and showed signs of being able to help moving forward.

Offensive line: D

There were no running lanes to be found, and James Stone struggled mightily to get the ball to Bray with his shotgun snaps. The sophomore hadn’t really shown any signs of problems through two weeks, but Bray was frequently scooping balls off the ground.

Defensive line: C-

The Vols didn’t have much time to generate much pressure on Florida quarterback John Brantley because he was so quick to dish it to his running backs. There were plenty of opportunities to wrap Chris Rainey and Jeff Demps in the backfield, but the Vols missed far too many times.

Linebackers: C-

A lot of the blame has to be placed on this group for the success of Florida’s short passing game. Rainey’s 83-yard catch-and-run came clearly as a result of busted coverage. Nevertheless, there were some highlights for this group, as both freshmen A.J. Johnson, who ran back a fumble in the third quarter, and Curt Maggitt looked very good at times.

Secondary: C

The Vols didn’t have to worry much about Brantley or Florida’s underwhelming group of wide receivers burning them for big plays, but they also share some of the blame for Rainey’s and Demps’ short catches going for long gains. There should have been someone around to slow down Rainey on his long touchdown catch. Senior Art Evans, back in the starting lineup, and Marsalis Teague were mostly reliable at cornerback, but they weren’t tested very often.

Special teams: F

What could go wrong did go wrong, and to make matters worse, there were penalties on top of that. Michael Palardy missed a short field goal in the first quarter, had a punt blocked and was woeful on kickoffs. The only facet that wasn’t a mess was the typically awful punt return team. Of course, with the way Florida was scoring, there weren’t many opportunities.

Coaching: C-

Dooley questioned his decision to go for a two-point conversion midway through the third quarter, but collectively the Vols seemed to make some adjustments on both sides of the ball that allowed them to stay competitive in a game that looked like it could get out of hand at times.

Overall: C-

The Vols were dealt some adversity early with Hunter going down, and they didn’t handle it well and struggled to get an early foothold in the game. That might not be surprising for a young team, but it showed some signs of maturing in the way it battled back late.

Gambling can lead to ruining your life jh22

I remember Lou Hardin when he took over at the University of Central Arkansas and practically doubled the size of that university. He was the toast of the town and he could do no wrong. However, he started gambling and the result was that he lost everything. The Arkansas Times reported on September 17, 2011:

THE HARDINS: Mary Hardin wrote court about her husband Lu: “I also hope you’ll see the other side of what you’ve been told about Lu. He is remorseful, contrite, and completely humbled.

  • THE HARDINS: Mary Hardin wrote court about her husband Lu: “I also hope you’ll see the other side of what you’ve been told about Lu. He is remorseful, contrite, and completely humbled.” (Photo by Brian Chilson)

Chuck Banks, the attorney for Lu Hardin, filed his pleading yesterday in federal court asking for leniency in sentencing Sept. 26 for Hardin, the former University of Central Arkansas president who has pleaded guilty to wire fraud in a bonus scheme he worked out in part to cover gambling debts.

Here’s the complete filing. From it:

The following factors are presented for the Court’s consideration in granting a probationary or alternative sentence, not as an excuse for Hardin’s behavior, but so that the Court can see the true man. These factors include: (1) Hardin’s acceptance of responsibility, extreme remorse and post-offense rehabilitation; (2) Hardin’s lifetime of service to the public and charitable organizations; (3) Hardin’s almost immediate payment of full restitution; (4) Hardin’s cooperation and other punishments already suffered because of the offense; and (5) Hardin’s recovering gambling addition.

So the question for readers: Has Hardin been punished enough by the public embarrassment and job and professional losses he’s experienced?

The complete filing is worth reading. It contains a biography (left fielder on a championship American Legion baseball team); has excerpts from many of the letters written in his behalf (son Scott Hardin: ” … the most honest man I have ever met. He has always been quick to call penalties on himself on the golf course, teaching me it is the only way to play the game….”), and it addresses the gambling that helped land him in court.

As explained in several of the letters of support provided to the Court, Lu Hardin has lived a life that has been a positive influence on others. He has been in an unquestioned faithful marriage for more than thirty years and he does not drink, smoke, or curse.

Approximately twelve years ago while on vacation, Hardin and his wife first played legal slot machines. He has never participated in any illegal gambling and in fact did not participate in any other form of legal gambling such as wagering on cards, dice, horses, or sporting events. His sole endeavor was slot machines which are known to be one of the most addictive forms of gambling. Although he was very financially stable when he began playing slot machines, what began as small stakes entertainment elevated to playing high stakes slot machines resulting in significant losses.

Hardin’s prior financial responsibility had him debt free at age 39 including owning a home in Russellville, Arkansas that was completely paid for. However, Hardin progressed from solid financial responsibility to deep debt. Lu Hardin took great pains accompanied with significant personal anguish to keep his legal wagering and the accompanying losses from his church, his friends, his board, other professionals, and any associated with the public except his wife.

Last year Hardin recognized he truly had an issue and has been attending Gamblers Anonymous since that date. He has been working the program, has a sponsor, and has not gambled in any shape, form, or fashion. Hardin has been proactive in his rehabilitation from gambling addiction and is ready to move forward with his life never entering a casino again.

__________________________________

John Brummett revisited the issue after Lu Hardin was sentenced in  a very good article.

Here is an excellent article from Crosswalk.com:

  • Michael Vlach, Author
  • Friday, October 15, 2004

An old joke asks: How can you tell when a gambler is lying? Answer: When his lips are moving. Unfortunately, this is often true for people who are addicted to gambling.

In his book Chance to Change, Michael Vlach explains that gambling and lying go hand in hand. “Problem gamblers usually do not have to think about lying and deception-it comes naturally,” he says. “To whom do problem gamblers lie? Everyone. This includes his or her spouse, parents, children, other relatives, friends, neighbors, employers, and coworkers. Gamblers also lie to themselves and to God.”

For a problem gambler, lying takes many forms. It may be saying you “broke even” at the casino, when really you lost $400. Or, it may mean telling your spouse you had to work late, when in reality you were at the racetrack. Or saying you lost a nice piece of jewelry that you really sold to the local pawnshop so you would have money to gamble.

Reflecting on her days as a problem gambler, Jane says, “I was beginning to lie to my own parents. Even to my own husband. I was beginning to believe my own lies; that’s the saddest thing.”

The same was true for Andy. “I lied to bill collectors about why I wasn’t getting my bills paid on time. ‘Oh, I’ve sent the check today,’ or, ‘I just got injured.’ I’d give them the sob story,” he states.

Lying can involve living a secret life, deception, manipulation, and even blaming others. Lying also involves rationalizations A gambler might think, everyone has his or her own form of recreation, mine just happens to be gambling. Or, I don’t have a gambling problem. You should see Joe; he loses a lot more money than I do.

No matter what the excuse is, there is one form of lying that is especially prevalent among problem gamblers. Vlach says, “Most problem gamblers are in denial. They have a cancer called gambling addiction that is killing them, and they refuse to see it. Those closest to the gambler clearly see it, but the gambler says, ‘I don’t have a gambling problem.'”

Embracing the Truth

God is “the God of truth” (Psalm 31:5). And He cannot lie (Hebrews 6:18). In fact, God hates lying. So how does a person who has lived a life of lying change his ways? He must not only commit to putting away all forms of lying, he must also actively embrace the truth.

If you have had trouble with gambling, remember, the truth will set you free. Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6). Take Andy’s advice: “Life is good when you don’t have to lie.”

8 Most Common Lies Gamblers Tell Themselves

Gambling addiction and lying go hand in hand. The following lists the 8 most common lies gamblers tell themselves.

1. “One more trip to gamble won’t hurt.”

2. “I need to go gamble to see my friends.”

3. “I’m a loser, so who cares if I gamble.”

4. “I deserve to gamble, because I have had a hard week.”

5. “Gambling is how I handle stress.”

6. “Nobody is perfect; everyone has problems; gambling just happens to be mine.”

7. “This is the last time I’m going to gamble.”

8. “Gambling isn’t my problem; other people are the real problem.”

Originally posted in CW Finances in Oct. 2004.

Adapted from Chance to Change: Help for Problem Gamblers by Michael Vlach. Used by permission of the author.

Church Initiative has created a 13-week video series for churches entitled Chance to Change: Christ-Centered Gambling Recovery. This resource empowers churches to reach problem gamblers in their communities. The videos feature instruction from forty Christian counselors, pastors, and financial experts. For more information, visit www.chancetochange.org. You can also view their other resources at www.churchinitiative.com.

Jay Leno’s discussion with Michele Bachmann on Tonight Show

The LA Times reported:

Michele Bachmann chatting with Jay Leno on the Tonight Show 9-16-11

As usual, there was nothing confrontational about Jay Leno’s interview with his political guest, in this case, Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-Minn.).

She was on the West Coast on Friday to speak in Orange County and at the state Republican Convention in L.A. and, who knows? Maybe to schmooze some money from the people who give California its Golden State name too. Watch out. President Obama is on his way to California too in a few days. Although, the story is, some Hollywood folks are kinda unhappy with him.

Bachmann’s star soared last summer. She won the Ames Straw Poll, which means nothing in reality but sounds good in the media for a while. But that same day, Rick Perry entered the Republican presidential sweepstakes. He’s a big-shot GOP governor from Texas and began sucking the air, the money and the media attention away from the only female in the contest so far.

Late-night American TV is a special breed. Some jokes. A little music. Some chatter. Maybe a movie starlet swears she got locked out of her Paris hotel room with nothing to wear but a hand towel. Nothing too complicated or controversial because regardless of the time zone, Americans are in their beds beginning to drift off to zzzzzz…

Not all Americans realize that these late-night interviews, especially with politicians, are

… negotiated and effectively outlined in advance between the show’s and politician’s staffs. (How do you think Leno has those quips so readily at hand?) Generally, the topics to be discussed — and the ones to be left out — are predetermined.This can be tricky because both sides want the exposure. The show wouldn’t mind a spontaneous gaffe; remember Barack Obama’s “joke” about not being as bad an athlete as a Special Olympian? Ooops, he had to apologize from the plane on that one.Buttons on sale at the california republican convention, 9-16-11Leno is very good at touching touchy subjects without seeming prosecutorial. Bachmann clearly wanted to talk about Texas Gov. Rick Perry attempting to order girls to get immunized against HPV, which can cause cervical cancer.

This has been Bachmann’s main attack on an allegedly authoritarian Perry to stem her drop in the polls. Watch Leno’s language in this exchange. As per agreement, he sets up Bachmann to say what she wants, as he already knows, and then gently questions the validity and gets her off the predictable “crony capitalism” talking point. And she doesn’t return to it.

LENO: You and Perry went over this HPV vaccine topic. Explain this whole deal.

BACHMANN: Well, there was a situation where it was an abuse of executive power. And that’s something that the governor admitted, that it was an abuse of executive power. It was an action by the governor to write an executive order to order all 12‑year‑old girls to have an injection before they could go into school.

LENO:  But it was never implemented; right? He signed it, but it was never implemented.

BACHMANN:  Right, right, right.

LENO:  OK.

BACHMANN: But it was highly controversial, and the Legislature in Texas was so angry, that they were going to — they passed a law to overturn it because they didn’t want to have the children go through that.

LENO:  OK.  I mean, is that bad?  I mean —

BACHMANN:  Well, I think so.

Michele Bachmann California Republican Convention Keynote speaker 9-16-11

LENO:  It’s a vaccine to prevent — what is it? Cervical cancer?

BACHMANN: Well, it’s HPV. And the concern is that there’s, you know, potentially side effects that can come with something like that. But it gives a false sense of assurance to a young woman when she has that that if she’s sexually active that she doesn’t have to worry about sexually transmitted diseases. And that’s not necessarily true.

LENO: Well, I don’t know if it gives assurance. It can prevent cervical cancer; correct?

BACHMANN: But it’s the — again, it’s something that potentially could have dangerous side effects. But it’s also the fact that — of crony capitalism. People were worried that potentially —

LENO:  But parents can opt out of it; right?  A parent can say, “I don’t want my daughter” — 

BACHMANN: You can opt out, but the way that these work is the fact that when you have to opt out, you have to be very proactive. And people just assume that the government does what’s best for you. And my experience has been that’s not always necessarily the case.

LENO: Yeah. OK. All right.

Leno did the same thing on the “tea party” movement’s debt-ceiling-increase opposition.

LENO: Do you think you would have been this strident if it was Bush-Cheney?

BACHMANN: Absolutely.

LENO:  Yeah?

On her family’s gay therapy clinic. And on gay marriage:

LENO: If two gay people want to get married, that’s their business; that doesn’t concern us. I mean, why is that — why is that even an issue?

BACHMANN: Well, because the family is foundational, and marriage between a man and a woman has been what the law has been for years and years.

LENO: I know. I tried it myself. It works great for me.

Bachmann got her national exposure with a cultural icon. Leno likely lived up to his bargain. That’s the only way he can get guests such as her to return. But he also made clear some expressed doubts about what the candidate was dishing out.

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Surprising facts about America’s poor

Surprising facts about America’s poor

Here are some interesting facts:

Mike Brownfield

September 13, 2011 at 11:00 am

In his address to the joint session of Congress last week, President Barack Obama called for $477 billion in new federal spending, which he said would give hundreds of thousands of disadvantaged young people hope and dignity while giving their low-income parents “ladders out of poverty.” And today, the U.S. Census released its annual poverty report, which declared that 46.2 million persons, or roughly one in seven Americans, were poor in 2010. What President Obama didn’t tell America as he was pleading for more spending–and what the Census Bureau didn’t report–is what it really means to be poor in America.

In a new report, Heritage’s Robert Rector and Rachel Sheffield lay out what the U.S. government’s own facts and figures really say about poverty in the United States. The results might surprise you, especially if your view of poverty is the conventional one, perpetuated by the media–namely, destitute conditions of homelessness and hunger. In reality, though, the living conditions of those defined as poor by the government are much different than that popular image. The following are facts about persons defined as “poor” by the Census Bureau:

  • 80 percent of poor households have air conditioning
  • Nearly three-fourths have a car or truck, and 31 percent have two or more cars or trucks
  • Nearly two-thirds have cable or satellite television
  • Two-thirds have at least one DVD player and 70 percent have a VCR
  • Half have a personal computer, and one in seven have two or more computers
  • More than half of poor families with children have a video game system, such as an Xbox or PlayStation
  • 43 percent have Internet access
  • One-third have a wide-screen plasma or LCD television
  • One-fourth have a digital video recorder system, such as a TiVo

As for hunger and homelessness, Rector and Sheffield point to 2009 statistics from the U.S. Department of Agriculture showing that 96 percent of poor parents stated that their children were never hungry at any time during the year because they could not afford food, 83 percent of poor families reported having enough food to eat, and over the course of a year, only 4 percent of poor persons become temporarily homeless, with 42 percent of poor households actually owning their own homes. Want an international comparison? The average poor American has more living space than the average Swede or German. You can read even more of those facts in their report, “Understanding Poverty in the United States.”

None of this is to say that the poor have it easy. Sadly, one in 25 will become temporarily homeless during the year, and one in five poor adults will experience temporary food shortages and hunger at some point in a year. But exaggerating the conditions of poverty does not do America any good, as Rector and Sheffield explain:

The poor man who has lost his home or suffers intermittent hunger will find no consolation in the fact that his condition occurs infrequently in American society. His hardships are real and should be an important concern to policymakers. Nonetheless, anti-poverty policy needs to be based on accurate information. Gross exaggeration of the extent and severity of hardships in America will not benefit society, the taxpayers, or the poor.

Those exaggerations about the symptoms of poverty don’t solve the root causes of the problem, either. As Rector and Sheffield write, “Among families with children, the collapse of marriage and the erosion of work ethic are the principal long-term causes of poverty.” In order to truly benefit the poor, they say, welfare policy must require able-bodied recipients to work or prepare for work as a condition of receiving aid. And it should strengthen marriage in low-income communities, rather than ignore and penalize it.

Poverty is a serious problem that requires serious solutions. But policymakers and the public need accurate information about what poverty in the United States really means. Only then can they implement the right policies to help those Americans who are truly in need.

Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art opens on 11-11-11

 

Around 4 years ago I was in Philadelphia and the local radio station had a talk show that was blasting Alice Walton for coming into town and buying  the 1876 Thomas Eakins’ masterpiece “The Gross Clinic” which was hanging at the  Jefferson Medical College. However, the people of Philadelphia were given 45 days to match the 68 million dollar price and they did. So the painting stayed in town.  Walton did not leave town empty handed though. She purchased a smaller Eakins’ masterpiece depicting Dr. Benjamin Rand for $20 million.

The Arkansas Times Blog’s article on the Alice Walton project is below:

Taylor Swift, hot; “Ring of Fire” at the renovated Arkansas Rep, great; “Judgment at Nuremberg” at the Weekend Theater, moving. But the biggest art event in Arkansas this fall has nothing to do with the performing arts: It’s the opening of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Alice Walton and family’s billion-dollar investment in Bentonville.

Even if portraits of George Washington by Gilbert Stuart and Charles Willson Peale don’t make your heart beat faster or bring you to tears, they are part of American history and treasured works of art. And the sweep and beauty of Asher Durand’s “Kindred Spirits” just might make you sob a bit (folks in New York have definitely wept bitter tears over their masterpiece going to Arkansas, Alice Walton having outbid, at $35 million, the Metropolitan Museum of Art for the painting).

The museum won’t be all portraits of significant figures in history, but a broad look at the history of American art, from rare 17th century portraits to the Hudson River School, early 20th century art to contemporary installation pieces. So there will be plenty to see at Crystal Bridges when it opens Nov. 11, 2011, or 11-11-11 (which happens to be Veterans Day) and for years to come. The museum puts Arkansas on the map.

The opening day celebration is sure to be accompanied by much as yet unpublicized but sure to happen hullaballoo. Having no facts, let’s suppose: One of the museum’s acquisitions is a Nick Cave “Soundsuit,” which is just as it sounds: A sculptural costume crafted to make sound when the wearer moves. Naturally, dancers have choreographed performances for the suits, and what better way to tie performance art and the CBMAA collection together than to have dancers in soundsuits swishing and swirling about the spring-fed ponds the museum bridges?

Alice Walton announced she would build the museum in 2006, then expected to be a three-year project. Her vision for the museum continued to grow, and she ditched the planned 1950s cut-off date to expand into contemporary work. The Moshe Safdie-designed complex began to grow too. A rectangle of connected buildings, tucked into a ravine that recalls “Kindred Spirits,” bank the reflecting pools fed by Crystal Springs. Six galleries showcase the art chronologically; one of the bridges contains the restaurant. A library holds manuscripts and other ephemera Walton has collected to support study of the collection, an amphitheater (nicknamed “the turtle” for its shape) will accommodate public gatherings, classrooms will be available for students and studios for artists. Of course, there will be a gift shop. More than three miles of trails crisscross the 120-acre site and they, too, are galleries of sorts, passing through Ozark uplands and wetlands, by cultural features, all dotted with sculpture.

So what’s on the walls? The museum has made periodic announcements of acquisitions, crumbs that Arkansas’s art lovers will follow to Bentonville. Paintings, drawings, sculpture. The work, bought at auction and privately, is by such American masters, besides those already mentioned, as John Singleton Copley, Thomas Eakins, Thomas Moran, Benjamin West, Winslow Homer, John Singer Sargent, Maxfield Parrish, George Wesley Bellows, Marsden Hartley, Norman Rockwell. Romare Bearden. Thomas Hart Benton. Jacob Lawrence. Andrew Wyeth. Ground-breaking modern artists Jackson Pollock, Arshile Gorky and Adolph Gottlieb. Pop artists Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Marisol and Claes Oldenburg. Hyperrealist Chuck Close. Silhouette cutting artist Kara Walker. Contemporaries we won’t have to travel to the coasts to see: Sculptor Karen LaMonte. Installation artists Jenny Holzer and Devorah Sperber. Weird naturalists Walton Ford and Tom Uttech. Social commentator Kerry James Marshall. You get the picture.

Walton has collected work by Arkansas artists as well — Carroll Cloar, George Dombek, Pat Musick, Doug Stowe. If there’s not sculpture by Anita Huffington, I’d be surprised.

All of this is richly supported by the Walton Family Foundation, which announced a staggering $800 million contribution to the endowment last spring, the largest gift ever made to an American museum at one time (according to the Wall Street Journal) and a sum that puts the museum in the big leagues. (The Metropolitan Museum of Art has a billion-dollar endowment, but it’s been around awhile.) Northwest Arkansas businesses are making donations to the museum as well.

Admission to Crystal Bridges is free, thanks, the museum says, to a $20 million contribution by Walmart. Memberships (whose costs range from $35 for students to $5,000 for benefactors) bring certain perks, including free admission to special exhibits and store discounts. The first 3,000 to buy memberships were rewarded with invitations to preview the museum Nov. 9; the museum will be open around the clock to accommodate them. Museum hours are still to be determined.

Best SEC 9/11 moment from last weekend? jh20

stadium2.jpg

Best SEC 9/11 moment from last weekend? jh20

I thought what we did here in Arkansas was the best until I looked around and found this story out of Tennessee. I am glad that so much effort was given to recognize our soldiers and their service at all the games throughout the SEC this week. I know at the Arkansas game several soldiers were recognized.

Former Vol football player Patrick Lenoir carries an American flag in honor of his brother who was killed in the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks as he runs through the 'T' with the football team at Neyland Stadium Saturday, Sept. 10, 2011. (AMY SMOTHERMAN BURGESS)

Photo by Amy Smotherman Burgess, KNS/2011 // Buy this photo

Former Vol football player Patrick Lenoir carries an American flag in honor of his brother who was killed in the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks as he runs through the “T” with the football team at Neyland Stadium Saturday, Sept. 10, 2011. (AMY SMOTHERMAN BURGESS)

published Sunday, September 11th, 2011

Wiedmer: Ex-Vol Lenoir a study in grief management

KNOXVILLE — For 10 years Patrick Lenoir couldn’t talk about it. Not a word. Not to newspapers. Not to church counselors. Not to anyone but his closest friends and family.

Early September would roll around, another somber 9/11 anniversary having arrived, and Lenoir would refuse all requests to discuss his brother Rob, who perished in the World Trade Center’s south tower in New York City that awful Tuesday morning, reportedly attempting to help others to safety.

“It just hurt too much,” Patrick said. “I even went to a grief counseling group at church. When it came my time to say something, I couldn’t do it. I never went back.”

But then the University of Tennessee, where he once played college football, called his Chattanooga home this past week. UT officials wanted him to hold the American flag during Saturday’s national anthem, then carry it through the “T” just before the Cincinnati game.

“I was a little surprised,” Lenoir said during halftime of the Volunteers’ 45-23 rout of the Bearcats. “But I decided to give it a try. I thought it would be a real treat for my family.”

Family. On this day above all days, we are a family of 312 million people strong, all of us deeply touched in one way or another by the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001.

Or as Lenoir said, “Everybody in this country was affected. Everybody was hurt. I just had a little more personal experience with it than some.”

But his father, John, had begun to talk to media outlets the last few weeks as the 10th anniversary swiftly approached. Patrick followed suit with The State paper in Columbia, S.C., mostly because that’s where he lived the first time he visited Neyland Stadium in 1982, the year Rob would throw the key block on a Duke kickoff return that would do in the Big Orange.

“I was for Duke that night,” Patrick said. “But then my parents moved to Memphis and I became a Vol.”

So 20 years after he’d last run through the “T” as No. 65 in the UT game program, nine years and 364 days after one of the two worst days in this nation’s history and the worst day of the Lenoir family’s life, here came Patrick running down the middle of Neyland Stadium’s perfect grass field, the Stars and Stripes held high, 94,207 roaring their approval.

“I was pumped in the locker room,” he said. “It was just like 20 years ago. I was slapping helmets, telling guys to go get ’em. They probably thought, ‘Who the heck is this guy?'”

In truth, they all knew who he was.

“That meant a lot,” said senior linebacker Austin Johnson. “That day is a tragic day for all of us, but just seeing him, seeing everybody come together, is a great sign.”

Patrick was the last Lenoir to quit looking for some sign that his brother would return home 10 years ago to his wife and children.

“I think my dad knew right away,” said Patrick, who has yet to visit Ground Zero. “I held on for two or three days. I just kept telling everybody that Rob was out there somewhere, that his cell phone just wouldn’t work, that he’d call one of us any minute.”

Instead, every year at this time, “The television channels all run videos of the planes hitting the building. I never get to let it go.”

But something different happened this year. Perhaps it was the gentle, comforting love of his wife, the former Kristy Dobson, who once starred for the UT volleyball team.

Maybe it was strong encouragement from his close friend Andy Kelly, the former UT quarterback for whom Lenoir once blocked.

Perhaps it was the endless support of his Chattanooga friends, the ones who phoned and sent food all those years ago, or the ones he didn’t even know who “wrote three- and four-page letters of support.”

Maybe it was the hugs of his three children: sons Jackson and Bailey, who caught two touchdown passes Friday night for East Hamilton, and daughter Emma.

Perhaps it was even the May killing of Osama bin Laden, the evil mastermind of the 9/11 attacks.

“That was special,” Patrick said. “You’re crazy if you think that will stop terrorism. But, hopefully, the world will be more peaceful now.”

Or maybe, hopefully, the passage of 10 years finally has brought some peace to the entire Lenoir family and all those other families whose lives were torn apart that awful Tuesday morning.

Perhaps to that end, when asked how he intended to spend anniversary No. 10, Lenoir said, “I’ve never actually been to a 9/11 service, but I’m going to go tomorrow.”