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Rick Perry: Not the Candidate for Me

Disclaimer: I am not a member or supporter of the Church of Jesus Christ, Latter-Day Saints, nor am I a polygamist. However, I decided back in 2008 that I could not support Governor Perry for any higher office. I thought the action against the FLDS group in Eldorado, TX was a travesty of justice and a disservice and a danger to all Texas families. I still think so.

The mass kidnapping of 464 FLDS children from their community in Eldorado, Texas, instigated by a crank call from a looney-tune named Rozita Swinton, took place during his watch. An operation of this magnitude could not have been launched without approval at the highest levels of state government. Worse yet, Gov. Perry defended the actions of CPS after the fact; on May 15th, 2008, Perry spokeswoman Krista Piferrer said the governor retained full confidence in the agency, noting that “The governor is very proud of the work being done by CPS…CPS has handled a very complex situation both professionally and compassionately.”

That so-called “professionalism” and “compassion” were called into question just one week later on May 22nd when the 3rd Court of Appeals in Austin ruled that Texas child welfare authorities acted improperly in removing the children from the FLDS Church’s YFZ Ranch in Eldorado. Ultimately, 440 children were returned to their parents. Wikipedia contains a more detailed chronology of the operation.

The estimated price tag for the entire operation was set at $12.4 million, which did not necessarily include ongoing fees of caseworkers and lawyers. Thus a governor who marketed himself as pro-family and an economic conservative ended up squandering $12.4 million of public money on an anti-family operation.

From Voice of Deseret blog, Memo To Texas Gov. Rick Perry: Mass Kidnapping Of 464 FLDS Children Disqualifies You From The Presidency.

Governor Perry acquiescence in this judicial kidnapping, not to mention his participation in the Guardasil fiasco, makes me very hesitant to support his candidacy for president. Please can we have a better, more thoughtful and truly conservative candidate to oppose Barack Obama in 2012?

$500 Million to Fix Five Year Olds Who Can’t Sit Still

Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius told CNSNews.com on Wednesday that the administration’s new $500 million early learning initiative is designed to deal with children from birth onward to prevent such problems as 5-year olds who “can’t sit still” in a kindergarten classroom.

Maybe many, if not all, five year olds weren’t meant to sit still in a classroom. Maybe we should modify the curriculum or the environment rather than trying to modify the five year olds.

I had one child who was quite ready to sit and learn to read and do math at age five. I had several children who weren’t. Why are we trying to make five year old “fit” into our own particular cultural and educational jigsaw puzzle instead of working with them as individuals with their own needs and gifts? And who is most qualified to see each child as an individual with his/her own timetable and learning channels?

Hint: I homeschool, and although I don’t believe that homeschooling is the best choice, or even possible, for everyone, I do think that young children are better off and learn more freely and appropriately in their own homes with their own parents teaching and encouraging them. At least they don’t have to be taught to “sit still” as soon as they hit their fifth birthday. And If I did want to teach them to settle down and listen, it wouldn’t cost the federal government, or me, a cent.

HT: Mommy Life by Barbara Curtis

Taking Off by Jenny Moss

Nominated for 2011 Cybil Awards, Young Adult Fiction category. Nominated by Kelly Jensen at Stacked.

Houston author, Jenny Moss, has written about my hometown setting, Clear Lake City, a suburb of Houston, and Johnson Space Center, the NASA facility where Engineer Husband works. Of course, when I saw such a local interest YA novel on the shelf at the library, I had to read it. And the time for a review, with the last shuttle Endeavor flight scheduled for this month, seems appropriate.

Annie Porter lives in Clear Lake, but she’s never been interested in the space program until her best friend invites her to a dinner where she’ll be able to meet Christa McAuliffe, NASA’s first Teacher-in-Space. Inspired by Christa’s zest for life, Annie, a senior in high school, decides to go to Florida to see the launch of the space shuttle Challenger.

Knowing how the story of Christa McAuliffe ends made this novel of a Texas girl torn between staying at home and venturing forth, well, a bit dark and foreboding. When the launch finally happens in the novel, even though I knew it would happen, the explosion of the Challenger was traumatic and terribly sad. Of course, Annie, who has placed almost all of her hopes and dreams for the future in her admiration for Christa McAuliffe, is devastated.

But Annie recovers and goes on to make a decision about whether she will be a “keeper or a dreamer.” I got those two labels from this post at Rabbit Room by Sarah Clarkson. As I commented there, I think all of us have some of the dreamer and some of the keeper inside us. The key is deciding when it’s time to “take off” and when it’s time to hold fast and make a nest and a community. Taking Off by Jenny Moss offers both a good story and some wisdom about choosing between the two modes of living intentionally.

Of Prophets and Pundits and Politics

First I read William F. Buckley by Jeremy, one book in a series called Christian Encounters, published by Thomas Nelson. These are short books dealing specifically with the Christian faith of various historical figures—John Bunyan, Sir Isaac Newton, and Winston Churchill, for example—and Buckley is the most recently living person profiled in the series.

I’ve always thought Mr. Buckley was a fascinating man; his wit, vocabulary, and, of course, his accent were quite attractive to me. I’m a political conservative, so I enjoyed most of his ideas, too. But I must say the manipulation of words and the way he spoke were the real draw whenever I listened to him, which was not very often. Anyway, Lott’s treatment of Mr. Buckley’s faith and its influence on his public persona was thorough, but a little disjointed. I felt as if I should have read a more complete biography of William F. Buckley first, and then read Lott’s dissertation to fill in the blanks, if any, in reference to Buckley’s Catholic faith and practice. And there were places where Jeremy Lott could have used a better editor; in one section he refers to “the event”, and I never did understand what the event he was referencing was.

Reading this incomplete, but tantalizing biographical treatment of William F. Buckley’s life, made me want to read some more of Buckley’s writing and a thorough biography of the man. I also wondered what WFB thought about Rush Limbaugh and other younger conservative firebrands, since the next book I read was Andrew Breitbart’s new book, Righteous Indignation: Excuse Me While I Save the World! I tend to think that WFB would have enjoyed Mr. Breitbart, even if he found the younger man a bit brash and vainglorious (as I did). I googled Rush and Buckley together and found this quote from Sam Tanenhaus who was supposed to be writing a biography of William F. Buckley at the time of this interview: “He (Buckley) liked Rush Limbaugh, who was published in National Review, but was more skeptical of Ann Coulter, whose book “Treason” he reviewed.” Mr.Tanenhaus’s biography must be DOA or still in abeyance.

Anyway, back to Breitbart, who were he here in person, would likely not have allowed my focus to stray from him and his mission to save the world for so long. Egotistical much? Yes, although similar to Rush Limbaugh’s persona, it’s part ego and part showmanship. Mr. Breitbart says in the book that Rush Limbaugh, Matt Drudge, and Ann Coulter are his heroes, and I would say that Breitbart does a creditable job of emulating that trio while still being an original. He also uses the ideas of community organizer Saul Alinsky to out-maneuver the most devious media manipulators of the left, and when all else fails and he realizes that he’s sounding like a crazy conservative, he pleads ADHD and plunges on to the next controversy.

It’s all highly entertaining, if you’re on his side, the conservative/libertarian side, and even if you’re not, it might be worth reading to see how the other half thinks and lives. Mr. Breitbart, if you’re not familiar with him, is the man behind the ACORN expose, and his web of of blogs, including BigHollywood, BigGovernment, Big Journalism, and BIgPeace, are his attempts to replace what he calls the “Democrat-Media Complex” with a New Media, more responsive to and in touch with the people it claims to serve.

As I said already, I enjoyed the book, even though Mr. Breitbart is something of a one-note Charlie. His message is that the liberals/Democrats control the mainstream media, and that to defeat the Dems conservatives have to discredit and defeat the Democrat-Media Complex. Oh, and the way to take out the mainstream media is to use the tactics that they’ve been using for years, the tactics of Saul Alinsky and the Huffington Post and the not-so-mainstream media.

I’m mostly in agreement with Andrew Breitbart, just as I mostly agree with William F. Buckley, Jr. And either man would make a scintillating dinner conversationalist or a highly explosive and dramatic political speaker. I would prefer to stay on their good side because I’m not as quick-witted as Buckley was, nor does my mind jump around as rapidly as Breitbart’s ADHD enables him to do. If you’re of the conservative persuasion already, you’ll enjoy both books in spite of their flaws and despite the inevitable character flaws of the subjects, Buckley and Breitbart.

If you lean toward the left politically speaking, you might find ammunition in one or both of the books, but probably not much pleasure.

Christians Meet the World: Adventuring in Faith

I’ve been reading a string of adventure, world travel, conversion memoirs in which common themes of caring for orphans, reuniting and dividing families, and surviving tragedy, kept reiterating.

First, I read Mary Beth Chapman’s Choosing To See, about the commitment of her and her husband, singer Steven Curtis Chapman, to adopt three girls from China, and also about the tragic death of one of those girls, Maria, in a car accident. Ms. Chapman is about as real as I would imagine anyone could be in writing about her battles with clinical depression, even before the adoptions, and about her struggle to make some kind of sense or gain some peace in the midst of a seemingly senseless tragedy. the story itself is powerful enough to overcome any deficiencies in the writing, and I was amazed and heartened to see God at work in the Chapmans’ story in spite of the suffering that they have endured. The foundation that the Chapmans started, Show Hope, is involved with orphan care and adoption aid around the world.

Next, I read a very different sort of book, set in a very different part of the world: Son of Hamas by Mosab Hasan Yousef. The Middle East, and the Palestinian Authority in particular, are very difficult parts of the world, and it makes sense that a memoir set in that violent and conflict-ridden area would leave some questions in my mind as I read it. Son of Hamas is the story of the oldest son of Sheikh Hassan Yousef, one of the founders of the Palestinian/Muslim organization, Hamas. Over the course of events in the book, Mosab Yousef becomes his father’s bodyguard and security detail while at the same time working for the Israeli security service, Shin Bet. He rationalizes this double life by telling himself that he is saving lives by informing on the terrorist activities and secrets that he is privy to knowing, but the strain becomes too much as he is also involved in a Christian Bible study and becomes convinced of the truth of the gospel of Jesus Christ.

While I was able to rejoice in Mr. Yousef’s conversion to Christianity and his eventual resignation from both Hamas activities and from his spying assignments for the Israeli Shin bet, I also took seriously Yousef’s admonition in the afterword of his book:

“So if you meet me on the street, please don’t ask for advice or what I think this or that scripture verse means, because you’re probably already way ahead of me. Instead of looking at me as a spiritual trophy, pray for me, that I will grow in my faith and that I won’t step on too many toes as I learn to dance with the bridegroom.”

The third memoir I read has a very different feel to it. Little Princes by Conor Grennan is the story of Nepalese children in an orphanage in Katmandu who were thought to be orphans but who were discovered to be mostly children who had been taken from their parents under false pretenses and abandoned or enslaved in the capital city of Katmandu. Grennan tells the story from his (American) point of view and shares some personal details of his own life, but he keeps the focus on the children. After stumbling into his work with the orphanage with less than pure motives (he wants to impress the women with his altruism), Grennan learns to care about the children and begins an organization dedicated to the goal of reuniting the trafficked children of Nepal with their families. You can read more about Conor Grennan’s non-profit organization Next Generation Nepal at the website.

Sad to say, although I believe after reading the books that all three of these authors are sincere in their beliefs and truthful in telling their respective stories, I can’t vouch for any of them personally. And in light of the recent revelations about Greg Mortenson and his immensely popular book Three Cups of Tea an the organization that he directs, Central Asia Institute, any book of this sort, especially Grennan’s which takes place in the same general area of the world, is bound to come under some scrutiny. Such scrutiny and due diligence is good, but a lack of compassion and charitable giving and general skepticism used to justify stinginess and apathy are not good and not right. We must give our money and our compassion wisely, but also generously.

Further information and links related to these books and to Mortenson’s CAI:
60 Minutes report on inaccuracies in Greg Mortenson’s Three Cups of Tea
Central Asia Institute website
Greg Mortenson’s response to 60 Minutes’ questions
John Krakauer: Three Cups of Deceit, How Greg Mortenson, Humanitarian Hero, Lost His Way
Conor Grennan’s non-profit organization Next Generation Nepal.
Conor Grennan’s blog
Conor Grennan on Condemning Greg Mortenson and a Thousand Little Girls
Son of Hamas blog
Son of Hamas book website
Show Hope foundation
Maria’s Big House of Hope Orphan Care center
Mary Beth Chapman’s website
Steven Curtis Chapman official site

By the way, by grouping these reviews and links together, I don’t mean to imply in any way that all or any of the books are inaccurate or filled with lies just because one book, Three Cups of Tea, has been accused of containing falsehoods. I read these books in succession, and then I read the news reports on the issues with Mortenson’s story. And I, of course, wondered. The fiasco surrounding Three Cups of Tea and Mortenson’s Central Asia Institute should be a strong warning to all memoirists, especially those involved in fund-raising, to be scrupulously honest in their story-telling. Mr. Mortenson’s looseness with the truth has hurt more people than just himself and more organizations than just CAI.

Sunday Salon: Upcoming Events in Houston

Here are some events that I would like to attend because they feed my fascinations:

Exhibit: Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Masterpieces from the National Gallery of Art
February 20–May 23, Museum Hours — Audrey Jones Beck Building, The Museum of Fine Art, Houston, 5601 Main St., Houston
The MFAH presents French Impressionist and Post-Impressionist masterpieces from the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. This exceptional loan exhibition brings to Houston 50 paintings from the National Gallery of Art’s premier holdings while the galleries that house its 19th-century French collection are closed for repair, renovation, and restoration. The National Gallery’s Impressionist and Post-Impressionist collection ranks among the finest of any museum in the world and features some of the greatest artists active in France between the 1860s and the early 20th century. The MFAH presentation showcases works by Mary Cassatt, Paul Cezanne, Edgar Degas, Vincent van Gogh, Édouard Manet, Claude Monet, Auguste Renoir, Georges Seurat, and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec. A fully illustrated catalogue exploring these paintings in depth accompanies the show. Admission to Impressionist and Post-Impressionist Masterpieces from the National Gallery of Art will require a timed-entry ticket that also includes general admission to the museum. See website for full ticketing information.

Lecture and Book Signing: Louis Markos discusses C. S. Lewis
March 23 and 30, 6:30 pm — Deacon’s Parlor, Second Baptist Woodway Campus, 6400 Woodway Dr., Houston
Louis Markos, professor of English and scholar in residence at Houston Baptist University, will give a two part lecture series on C. S. Lewis based on his two new books: Apologetics for the 21st Century and Restoring Beauty: The Good, the True, and the Beautiful in the Writings of C. S. Lewis. The talks are free and open to the public, and will be followed by a book signing.

Concert: St. John Passion
March 27, 5:00 pm — Zilkha Hall, Hobby Center for the Performing Arts, 800 Bagby, Houston
Bach’s setting of the passion narrative from the Gospel of John is sacred drama of the highest order. This beloved work, presented in collaboration with the Moores School of Music Concert Chorale, features tenor Tony Boutté as the Evangelist and a stellar lineup of soloists and players. Presented by Ars Lyrica. Tickets are available online or by calling 713-315-2525.

Free Performance: UST Jazz Ensemble Concert
April 5, 7:30 pm — Cullen Hall, University of St. Thomas, 4001 Mt. Vernon, Houston
Dr. Malcolm Rector leads the talented UST Jazz Ensemble in performing some of the most spectacular selection from the harmonious music genre that is Jazz music. The UST Jazz Ensemble, famous for its sophisticated sound and fabulous improvisation, will be performing in UST’s Cullen Hall. This event is free and open to the public.

Performance: Amadeus
April 6–May 1, Times Vary — Alley Theatre, 615 Texas Ave., Houston
Peter Shaffer’s Tony Award–winning play is a riveting tale of obsession and vengeance. Loosely based on the lives of Viennese court composer Antonio Salieri and his young rival Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Amadeus follows a murder plot that shocks and fascinates. After committing his life to God in order to be blessed with the ability to create the world’s most sublime music, Salieri believes that God graced the rebellious Mozart with greater inspired creativity. Envious Salieri schemes to destroy Mozart and, in so doing, rebukes God. See website for performance schedule. Purchase tickets online or by calling 713-220-5700.

Free Lecture: Dr. Neil de Grasse Tyson
April 13, 7:00 pm — Hilton Hotel, University of Houston, Houston
Dr. Neil de Grasse Tyson is the Frederick P. Rose Director of the Hayden Planetarium at the American Museum of National History and Visiting Research Scientist and Lecturer at Princeton University. Dr. Tyson published the first of six books on astronomy and astrophysics in 1988. His research interests include star formation, exploding stars, dwarf galaxies, and the structure of the Milky Way. To conduct his research, he uses telescopes all over the world as well as the Hubble Space Telescope. This lecture is presented as part of the Elizabeth D. Rockwell Ethics & Leadership Lectures.

Concert: Rodgers & Hammerstein and More
April 21, 8:00 pm — Jones Hall, 615 Louisiana St., Houston
Ashley Brown, celebrated leading lady of the Broadway stage in such Disney blockbusters as Mary Poppins and Beauty and the Beast, recently came to Houston to reprise the role of Mary Poppins in the National Tour. She comes to Houston again to be a part of an unforgettable concert with the Houston Symphony and Robert Franz. Hear her perform your favorite Rogers and Hammerstein songs along with selections from her Broadway roles and much, much more. Tickets may be purchased online or by calling 713-224-7575.

U.S. Launches Missile Strike on Libya

The Pentagon reports the United States has launched a missile strike on Libyan air defenses.

American warplanes, ships and submarines are prepared to launch a furious assault on Libya’s limited air defenses, clearing the way for European and other planes to enforce a no-fly zone designed to ground Moammar Gadahfi’s air force and cripple his ability to inflict further violence on rebels, U.S. officials said. The U.S. also has the ability to knock out air defense radars with Navy electronic warfare planes.

Hours after Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton attended an international conference in Paris that endorsed military action against Gadhafi, the U.S. was poised to kick off its attacks on Libyan air defense missile and radar sites along the Mediterranean coast to protect no-fly zone pilots from the threat of getting shot down. (Sources: Associated Press, USA Today, the Pentagon)

As the Lord leads, please pray now:

* For the protection of all U.S. servicemen and women participating in this attack.
* For the safety of all Allied forces engaged in the operation.
* For the safety of Libyan civilians and rebels and all who are in the strike zone
* For God’s purposes to be accomplished as a result of this international action against Libya.

From: The Presidential Prayer Team

Obama Prayer by Charles M. Garriott

Obama Prayer: Prayers for the 44th President by Charles M. Garriott.

Confession time: I requested this book from the author when I received an email pitch, but then when I got it, I didn’t really want to read it. President Obama is not my favorite politician/leader, and if I read the book I’d probably be convicted about actually spending valuable time praying for the man and his presidency. Did I want to do that? And then, what if I did pray for Mr. Obama, but God didn’t do anything that I recognized as an answer to my prayers? Or, like in the story of Jonah, what if God did bring Mr. Obama and the rest of his administration to repentance and change? Would I believe it? Or would I rather see God’s wrath outpoured on those with whom I disagree both morally and politically?

Ouch. So first I prayed for my own rather faithless and vengeful heart to be changed, and then I read the book.

Each chapter of this brief but powerful book of less than 100 pages attempts to answer in various ways the question, “How then do we pray for Barack Obama, the President of the United States of America?” I was led to pray for Mr Obama’s words and decisions, for his family and the example he sets for the families of our nation, for wisdom for him and for his advisors, for him to pursue and maintain truth, for protection for him personally and for our nation, for him to display both justice and mercy in his actions and in the laws he executes. Each chapter ends with a prepared prayer that the reader can use to place before the Lord in behalf of President Obama, to intercede for him and for his government of our nation.

We are commanded as Christians to pray for our leaders. I prayed often for President George W. Bush and his administration. For President Obama, not so much. I don’t understand prayer very well, and I fail to pray for all the reasons I already confessed to, and also because sometimes I’m just lazy. However, not praying when we are told plainly to do so in the Bible is wrong, and I am determined to obey God whether I totally understand why He asks what He asks or not. So I recommend this little book to you if you are a Christian citizen of the United States who wants to to do what God commands in regard to our government and our president. I’m going to keep this book next to my Bible for the next year or two to remind me that God is in control and to help me to remember to pray for Barack Obama.

“We must keep this in mind when praying for a president. The call to pray for President Barack Obama and his administration is first of all a call to dependency on God. It is a call to respond to the work of grace within our lives. It is a reminder that in the political realm neither we nor the president are ultimately in charge.”

“I urge, then, first of all, that requests, prayers, intercession, and thanksgiving be made for everyone—for kings and all those in authority, that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness. This is good and pleases God our Savior, who wants all men to be saved and to come to a knowledge of the truth.” I Timothy 2:1-5

Obama Prayer by Charles Garriott will be available from Amazon and other booksellers on February 15, 2011. You can start praying anytime.

Voices for Life

Joan at Lines in Pleasant Places: “I didn’t plan on having you at age eighteen, but God did. He knew from before I was born, that I would have you at only eighteen. He knows now if you are a boy or girl, and He has a plan for your life, as well as mine.”

Keiki Hendrix at Wonder of Days: Since Roe v. Wade in 1973, “over 46 million children have died. Let that sink in – 46 million. This hits me at home because one of those 46 million is named Elizabeth and she was mine.”

Judy at Carpe Libris: “I don’t think we realize sometimes that the issue of abortion involves real people, men and women who are struggling to do the right thing. Whether it be the question of “Do I abort or not?” or “What is my family going to think?” or “How is all of this going to affect my life?”, there are some agonizing decisions to be made.”

Marcia Morrisey at Patheos: When you are struggling, and the medical people are so forceful, the idea of abortion blips through your mind, unbidden, because you’re told it is a real option, and when you’re emotional, it’s easy to fall for fall for rhetoric.

That Mom: As the crisp melodic phrases of Mozart danced off of her fingertips, my heart swelled with pride and a sense of the awesome God who created this child, choosing her as His own before the foundations of the world, and giving her life in my womb.