Monday, April 28, 2008
Facts, Faith, Family, Fruits
First, "Mormon" is a nickname for The Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter-day Saints. Members are often referred to as "Mormons,"
"Latter-day Saints," or "LDS." The term "Saint" means "member."
Second, the Church was restored in 1830 in upstate New York with
Joseph Smith as its first prophet and president. Today it is
headquartered in Salt Lake City, with President Thomas S. Monson as
the present prophet.
Third, there are now over 13 million members in 176 countries and
territories. About 6 million of these are in the United States, making
us the fourth largest Christian denomination in America. As one of the
fastest growing Christian faiths in the world, we complete a new
chapel every working day. Members pay a tithe, which is 10 percent of
their income, making this and other programs possible.
Fourth, local congregations are led by volunteer, unpaid members. Both
men and women serve in assigned leadership positions.
And fifth, Mormons are well represented in politics and government.
(In the United States, for example, there are 16 members in Congress,
from both political parties.) Members also serve in high and trusted
positions throughout the world in business, medicine, law, education,
media, sports, and entertainment.
About the faith:
We believe in the eternity of the soul, that God is the Father of our
spirits, and that we can return to Him after death.
We believe that Jesus Christ is our personal Savior, and we try to
model our lives after Him and His teachings. We commemorate Christ's
atoning sacrifice in our Sunday worship services, similar to taking
communion in other churches. We accept as fellow Christians all who
believe Jesus Christ to be the Son of God and the Savior of all
mankind. Many Christians do not understand that we have much common
ground with them. Joseph Smith taught that Jesus Christ is the core of
our belief, and everything else is an appendage to it (see Elders'
Journal, July 1838, 44). The name of the Church is The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter-day Saints.
We believe the original church that Jesus established was lost and has
been restored again in our day. The priesthood, the authority given to
man to act in the name of God, with apostles and a prophet to lead us,
has been restored as have all necessary ordinances of salvation.
We believe in and we use the Holy Bible, both the Old and New Testaments.
And we believe in the Book of Mormon and other books of scripture
which support and authenticate the Bible and testify of the ministry
and divinity of Christ and of God's ongoing revelation to man. Indeed,
the Book of Mormon is "Another Testament of Jesus Christ."
Focus on the family:
Mormons place particularly strong emphasis on family as the basic unit
of the Church and of society. We have a deep commitment to marriage
(defined as a union between one man and one woman). Polygamy, a
limited practice in the early pioneer days of the Church, was
discontinued in 1890, some 118 years ago.
Families and individuals, whether members of our faith or not, can
attend Sunday services in our chapels. Here we worship together,
instructing one another from the scriptures.
Latter-day Saint families are encouraged to hold family home evenings
weekly, usually on Monday nights. This provides a regular and
predictable time for parents to teach values to their children and to
have fun together. We invite those not of our faith to adopt this
practice with their own families.
The Church has auxiliary programs for women, youth, and children as a
support to the family. These programs provide such things as religious
instruction, opportunities for Christian service, sports, drama,
music, and Scouting.
And there is also much focus on extended family, genealogy, and
personal family history, providing young and old with a stronger sense
of roots, identity, and belonging. The highest and most sacred
ordinances of our faith relate to our families, both living and dead,
and some of these ordinances take place in our temples.
By their fruits you should know them:
One of the fruits is a longer life. Studies show that practicing
Mormons are healthier and therefore live longer than the national
average. In 1833 the Lord revealed to Joseph Smith the Word of Wisdom,
which is the way to live in order to enjoy a long and healthy life.
Second, those who are married in and attend the temple regularly have
a divorce rate far below the national and world average.
Third, we achieve an educational level that is higher than the
national average.
Fourth, over 70,000 members volunteer at their own expense to serve
for 18 to 24 months in humanitarian efforts, Church service
assignments, and full-time missionary service throughout the world.
And fifth, we place strong emphasis on self-reliance and a solid work
ethic. We encourage active involvement in our communities and in
providing service to others. The Church continues to donate
substantial money, goods, and services to humanitarian causes around
the globe, including untold hours of labor donated by members to
assist in disaster cleanup and relief.
From a talk by Apostle M. Russell Ballard
http://www.lds.org/conference/talk/display/0,5232,49-1-775-9,00.html
Monday, April 21, 2008
Missouri GOP Playing Machine Politics with Ron Paul Delegates
receiving reports that Missouri GOP rules have been violated in the
set-up and execution of several county Republican caucuses. Ron Paul
supporters in Missouri have been attending their county caucuses and
electing Ron Paul delegates to be seated at the Missouri Republican
State Convention. However, there are concerns that many Ron Paul
delegates to the Missouri Republican State Convention were
disenfranchised and not properly seated.
On Thursday, March 20, campaign field director Debbie Hopper visited
the Missouri state GOP headquarters to request a copy of the records
needed to obtain the information to file challenges. She was told in
front of witnesses that she could not view the report. To obtain the
needed information, Ms. Hopper then used the contact information of
county chairs listed on the state GOP website. On Saturday, March 22,
the webpage containing their contact information had been removed.
The Paul campaign believes that a handful of GOP officials are playing
machine politics and breaking their own rules to disenfranchise Paul
supporters.
"The Republican party is in trouble and needs more participants in
2008, not less," said campaign manager Lew Moore. "It makes no sense
for Missouri party leaders to exclude and marginalize the new
activists they badly need to work at every level this fall."
Republican presidential candidate and Texas Congressman Ron Paul's
supporters have been highly successful in several Missouri counties.
In St. Charles County (suburb of St. Louis), Paul supporters filled
241 of the 274 country Republican delegate slots. In Jackson County
(Kansas City), Paul supporters filled 162 of 187 delegate slots. And
in Greene County (Springfield), Paul supporters filled 72 of 112
delegate slots.
Ron Paul speech in Austin, Texas
7500 in Austin, TX." I checked Google News and have found no mention
of his speech nor the event. Does anyone have more news?
The Revolution: A Manifesto by Ron Paul
<http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig9/horton2.html> provides the following
review of Ron Paul's book, The Revolution: A Manifesto."
I've just finished Ron Paul's The Revolution: A Manifesto, and am once
again floored by Dr. Paul's ability to identify the most important
issues facing this country and explain their libertarian solutions in
"honest, direct language," as George Carlin would say.
In seven concise chapters, heavy with notable quotes from the
founders, American historical figures, social researchers and Austrian
economists, Dr. Paul destroys the myths of governmental benevolence
and benefit on nearly every issue of importance for the present and
future of this country.
He begins, of course, with foundational explanations of natural rights
and the limits placed on the general government by the constitution
which allows its existence. Paul then excoriates the government and
explains the solution to its problems of empire, war, terrorism,
conscription, violations of the Bill of Rights, spying, torture, the
drug wars, health care, the welfare state, regulatory state, managed
trade and the destruction of the American economy at the hands of the
Federal Reserve system. He points out that the differences in the
positions of the major parties and politicians are nearly meaningless
as our country becomes a de facto one-party state under the centrist
Democrats and neoconservative-controlled Republicans. They fight all
day about meaningless details while we descend into tyranny.
Dr. Paul, whose steadfast opposition to warfare in the U.S. Congress
extends back to his first terms in office in the 1970s, makes his
standard case that rather than leading to some abstract "national
greatness," empire, in fact, weakens America. He says the cost of
maintaining our empire is nearly a trillion dollars a year and that we
just can't afford it. Paul maintains that rather than protecting our
freedom, war is nearly as destructive to our society as those of the
people we wage them against. War leads to unchecked executive power
and the destruction of our most highly valued liberty. Paul denounces
our government's policy of "preemptive" aggressive war as always
morally and consequentially wrong and never justified. He also
explains the anti-imperialist legacy of the Old Right and the antiwar
sentiments of the more thoughtful leaders of the middle-to-New Right
such as Russell Kirk, Richard Weaver, and Robert Nisbet. Paul explains
that there is nothing conservative about waging war; it undermines
every principle that conservatives claim to cherish (i.e., the
Constitution, the rule of law, family values, free markets, fiscal
restraint.)
Paul thrashes the War Party over the subject of the next aggressive
war on the horizon: Iran. He reminds us that he's been correct for
years in saying there was no evidence of a secret nuclear weapons
program in Iran as all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies confirmed in
their National Intelligence Estimate last fall and shows clearly that
to this administration, as with their invasion of Iraq, the agenda is
war and any excuse or varied combination of excuses will do.
Terrorism, the current excuse for our world empire, he explains, is
not an enemy, but a strategy employed by enemies. People in occupied
countries, Muslim or otherwise, have used this tactic to try to force
the democratic societies which occupy them to withdraw their combat
forces due to the expense of the predictable overreaction. He quotes
intelligence beat journalist James Bamford's reporting of Ayman al
Zawahiri's stated goal of trapping us in the Middle East to give us a
"desert Vietnam" – to bleed us dry and force us out as the Reagan
administration helped them do to the Russians in the 1980s. This being
the case, Paul concludes further invasions and occupations of their
countries is exactly the wrong policy to follow. It is the founders'
foreign policy of peace, commerce and honest friendship which best
protects Americans from terrorism. (In this section, Paul quotes
former CIA counter-terrorism agents Michael Scheuer and Philip Giraldi
from my interviews of them for Antiwar Radio.)
Paul says we should demand the immediate repeal of the Military
Commissions Act of 2006 and insist on the protection of habeas corpus
for all detainees unless the most immediate circumstances on the
battlefield prevent it and that no American should ever be held by the
military and subjected to torture as was José Padilla. He has
introduced legislation in Congress to ensure those very things, among
others, in the American Freedom Agenda Act of 2007.
Paul says that torture is always wrong and should never be tolerated
for one second by the proud residents of a free society no matter what
excuse those with power can conjure.
Paul also makes an eloquent case against conscription, calling it
"slavery" and quoting Daniel Webster and Ronald Reagan to make the
case that the draft contradicts the very premise of a free society,
the constitution forbids it and that it should never be allowed in
this country ever again.
He explains in detail how the administration has told lie after lie in
order to justify their blatantly unconstitutional, unnecessary and
illegal spying on Americans.
Economist Paul also explains his moral and practical opposition to
managed trade organizations like NAFTA and the WTO, since they are
unconstitutional transfers of Congress' delegated powers and they
actually sanction trade wars, require our Congress to raise taxes when
they feel like it and otherwise interrupt peaceful trade. He points
out that nothing new needs to be done to have free trade with other
countries; all the government has to do is stop interfering. Presto,
no tariffs, no subsidies.
It should be no surprise that a free market fundamentalist like Paul
opposes all foreign aid and "restructuring" of other countries'
economies though the IMF and the World Bank, whose proclaimed purpose
is to help the poor, when all they do is prop up governments that the
locals oppose, distort and disrupt local markets and generally
impoverish those who are supposedly being helped.
In The Revolution, as on the House floor, Paul takes a heroic stand
against the federal government's war on drugs and the entire policy in
general. It is the creation of the black market by the congress and
state legislatures which creates the environment in which murder,
extortion and gang wars prevail, he explains. He gives special
attention to the long history of frauds perpetrated by government in
order to criminalize marijuana possession and sale. It was simply
racist bigotry against Mexicans and a desire to persecute them which
motivated the early American drug warriors. Their legacy is one of
lives destroyed not by drugs, but by the state in its
post-constitutional, "we own you and will decide what's good for you"
role it now plays in our society.
In the book Paul brings up the issue of race in terms of a limited
national government, the unfair prosecution and sentencing of
minorities in the drug wars and in terms of the impossibly burdensome
regulatory state. The solution, he maintains, is a belief in
individualism and a willingness of people to enforce their rights from
the bottom up rather than looking to Washington DC. He explains how
government serves only to divide us more even when attempting to
ameliorate the problems of the past.
Paul also explains how government drives up the cost of health care
for everyone and how the current welfare state is simply unaffordable
and unsustainable by any measure. He explains how government
interventions have led us to our current crisis and how real
laissez-faire – not corporatist or socialist – reforms would fix the
problems.
Another example of government failure cited is the current state of
public education in this country. While not calling for abolition of
all public schools, Paul does demand we get rid of the federal
Department of Education and also explains how incredible amounts of
resources are wasted into oblivion by the bureaucrats in ways that
would never happen at private schools, making a strong case that
parents could afford many more choices in education without the
oppressive tax burdens they carry and that they would be well served
to seek education outside the strictures of the state. Always tying
political questions back to individual liberty, Paul also asks a basic
question almost unheard of in polite company: why should anyone be
forced to pay for the education of another and particularly when that
person disagrees with the slant of the instruction? As just one
example of the direction DC is leading us, Paul points out a little
noticed but obviously dangerous move by the pharmaceutical companies
and the national government to give mandatory "mental health" exams to
all school children in order to force many millions more of them to
take psychotropic drugs at the threat of removal from their parents.
He rightly complains that even 20 years ago the people of this country
would have been absolutely outraged. Maybe it's the Prozac.
Dr. Paul also excoriates the modern regulatory state and explains how
it makes us all poorer in order to benefit those who are already rich.
Paul sticks up for the individual and his property rights against all,
the rich, the poor or anyone else's attempts to separate him from it
with force – personally or through the state. It is our free economy,
not government intervention which has made us so prosperous. Paul's
argument is nowhere close to an apologia for big business. It is they
who have pushed all along for the governmental cartelization and
regulation of business. The state is the mechanism by which those
connected to its power can stifle competition and socialize their
costs onto the rest of society. Questions of environmental pollution
are one of Paul's favorite examples of the failures of regulation, and
for good reason. Really, no EPA is necessary – to protect the victims
of the crime. Pollution can be handled simply by protecting people's
basic property rights with local courts. In fact, the purpose of the
EPA is to protect the polluters from competition first and the
consequences of polluting the environment second by claiming "public"
ownership of the affected area (the air, bodies of water, etc.) and
then providing immunity to those politically connected corporations
who are within the "guidelines" they set for themselves. The right of
the average guy to seek redress in a local court is then circumvented
by the regulation of the executive branch. The explanation of why this
is so, contained in The Revolution, should be enough to educate even
the most pointy-headed of your liberal and leftist friends.
Paul, a supposed student, but really an Austrian school economist in
his own right, also gives a concise explanation of the criminal
Federal Reserve System which robs the poor to benefit the bankers and
merchants of death. Inflation, Paul explains, is a hidden tax, one
that hurts the poor, working and retired people most for the benefit
of these war-mongering plutocrats. They try to make the system seem
too mysterious for the average guy to understand but it's not.
Stealing is stealing. The central bank causes the booms and busts they
claim to "smooth out" with their process of artificially inflating the
supply of money, causing bubbles of malinvestment in the market and
setting us up for recessions. The popular line that "we the people,"
through "our" Congress, use the state's regulation to protect us from
the "excesses" of capitalism must be the greatest line of bull fed to
a population since the Aztec Flower Wars. Again, the light shed by
Paul provides clarity to a subject extremely important and yet opaque
to the people most affected.
Dr. Paul ends the book with a celebration of the wide and varied
millions who've rallied around his campaign and a call for those of us
who love liberty to stand up for ourselves and put our out-of-control
empire back in its place.
The joy I feel knowing that millions will eventually read this concise
libertarian primer just makes me want to celebrate.
The heroic Ron Paul has done it again.
Thursday, April 17, 2008
The problem with sales tax
compared with the same month last year, according to a general revenue
report the state Office of Administration. Read more at
http://www.bizjournals.com/kansascity/stories/2008/03/31/daily32.html.
Last week our city passed a sales tax increase of a half a percent.
That brings our sales tax up to nearly 8 percent, one of the highest
in Missouri.
The mayor claimed the money was badly needed to repair roads, build a
911 tower, and pay for a new fire truck. The added tax will end in
ten years.
End in ten years? We'll see if that's true. Tax increases rarely end.
The problem with sale tax is that it taxes the poor and the middle
class. You can only buy so much food and so many consumable goods,
even if you are wealthy. (But that's not the point.)
Sales taxes discourage rather than encourage business. They
discourage new businesses from coming into a community. They
discourage shoppers from buying in the community.
It now makes it even more attractive for me to shop in the larger city
a half an hour away.
The apologists for the tax say it's only 50 cents on $100. Well, if
during a time of recession people are buying less, a sales tax
increase doesn't help. With a 15 percent decrease in sales and 5
percent increase, that still means $1 less in taxes on $100 dollars in
sales.
In a recession sales taxes discourage buying and don't help government.
A much better approach would be to encourage small business growth.
One business move-in would bring much more than the projected revenues
from a sales tax increase. Two business start-ups would do the same.
Sales taxes work against business growth and consumer spending.
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