Politics

America is Not Perfect, But She’s Pretty Damn Awesome

I don’t care what side of the fence you stand on, the concept behind this video, the sheer mindless drones that this betrays, has GOT to scare you, at least a little bit.

Granted, this is pretty dramatic. But maybe things like this will be what it takes to WAKE PEOPLE UP – our government would love to control us like this and I don’t know about you guys? But I have NO desire to become a puppet on a string, thank you very much.

I thought these videos were interesting: What would Reagan do.

It’s pretty refreshing to see a president who isn’t afraid to stand up and take the hits for our country, isn’t it. It’s time to elect someone who will defend our country, reinforce our values and STOP apologizing for our country.

(Just in case I lost you, I’m talking about Obama here).

We need to stop kowtowing to political correctness, and to foreign (and domestic!) dictators.

GOD BLESS AMERICA!

Abundant Life

Teaching: 10 Characteristics of Godly Community

Every Sunday I provide videos and valuable links to the Truth or Tradition teachings. We’ve been following the Truth or Tradition teachings for many years now and they have truly blessed our family. We have found peace and happiness through our beliefs and we walk confidently for God. My hope, by passing on this information to you, is that what you find here, or on the Truth or Tradition website, will guide you to a better, more blessed and abundant life.

If you would like to read my views on religion and how we got started with the ministry, you can read this.

Let’s get started:

1. Inclusive
Be witnesses unto the uttermost part of the earth (Acts 1:8).
For God so loved the world…that whosoever (John 3:16).

2. Diversity
God will have all men to be saved (1 Tim. 2:1).

3. Authenticity
Speaking the truth in love (Eph. 4:15).
Don’t lie to each other (Col 3:9).

4. Mutuality
Be devoted to one another (Rom. 12:10).
Have equal concern for each other (1 Cor. 12:25).
Serve one another (Gal. 5:13).
Encourage one another (1 Thess. 4:18, 5:11).
Agree with one another (Phil. 4:2).
Build up each other (1 Thess. 5:11).

5. Sympathy
Carry each others burdens (Gal. 6:2).
Support the weak (1 Thess. 5:14).
Be compassionate with one another (Eph. 4:32).

6. Mercy
Forgive one another (Col. 3:13).
Accept one another (Rom. 15:7).

7. Humility
Confess your sins to one another (James 5:16).
Pray for each other (James 5:16).
Submit to one another (Eph. 5:21).

8. Courtesy
Be kind to each other (1 Thess. 5:15).
Bear with each other (Col. 3: 13).

9. Confidentiality
Don’t slander one another (James 4:11).
Don’t grumble against each other (James 5:9).

10. Frequency
Don’t give up meeting with each other (Heb. 10:25).

Looking for Fellowship in your area? Contact Truth or Tradition about the Fellowship Network.

If you have any questions, or would like to learn more about God’s wonderful message, please visit the Truth or Tradition website. You can also keep track of the ministry through their Facebook page, their YouTube Channel, or follow them on Twitter.

Thanks for reading.

(Comments have been turned off. The information is here to inform and bless you. God granted you the gift of free will – take it or leave it).

More from Write From Karen

Politics

Caution! I Need More Time to Be Distracted

They call it the “dilemma zone.” That point in time when you’re driving down the street and the light turns to yellow. You have exactly 1/2 second to decide if you’re going to run the light, or slam on your brakes. Do you have time? What does your internal clock tell you? Because we all know that yellow lights stay on for five seconds.

Give or take a click or two.

What would you do if you didn’t know how long the yellow light would stay on? I’m betting you would stop – better safe than sorry, right?

MoDOT (Missouri Department of Transportation) is changing traffic signal times in response to a new Federal study that found we need more time to stop. It’s not because of what we drive, because newer cars are getting better at stopping.

MoDOT’s Tom Blair said, “Cars do stop, just as well or better than they have in the past. [Chris Hayes interjected] This is our problem. [Blair added] This is our problem. Our motorists, myself included, we need more time to stop. We have too many things that distract us from doing our due diligence which is being an alert driver.”

So MoDOT is adapting to how we react when approaching an intersection. Engineers call it the dilemma zone. We all get that feeling when the light turns yellow, ‘can I make it?’ A lot of it depends on how fast you’re going. So MoDOT is changing yellow lights to make it comfortable for you to stop and they’re basing it on the average speeds people are going.”

Source

MoDOT implemented the longer yellow light experiment at an intersection in Arnold, Missouri to see if fewer people would be caught running a red light.

Last May, Arnold cited 709 people for running a red light on camera.
May 2011? Arnold cited 17 people.

So, will MoDOT implement longer yellow lights throughout Missouri?

MoDOT’s Tom Blair cautioned, “I think the jury’s still out, Chris, on the reduction of red light violations that we’ve seen in 141 in the city of Arnold. We have to see 2-3 months, 6 months, a year from now, does that continue to produce that? Or do all the motorists just re-adapt and now they start running the new red light time?

And that’s precisely what I think will happen. I think the lower number of people caught running red lights in the example above is because the longer duration allowed more people to cross the intersection before it turned red. I also think it temporarily confused people and they slowed down out of caution.

I also firmly think that people WILL adapt and we will soon be back to the exact same situation we’re in now – people will take chances because people inherently think they can get away with it. So overall? I don’t think lengthening the amount of time the yellow light is on will make a huge difference one way or another.

But the part that really gets my blood boiling about this entire piece? MoDOT wants to lengthen the yellow lights because “we have too many things that distract us from doing our due diligence which is being an alert driver.”

Because we’re distracted with something other than driving, we need more time to stop.

What. The. Hell.

So, in answer to the fact that too many people are distracted when they drive is to give people MORE time to finish what they’re doing and bring their attention back to driving.

Because driving is a SECONDARY priority, you see.

Are you kidding me??

Here’s an idea – CUT OUT THE DISTRACTIONS AND FOCUS ON DRIVING, MORONS. WHY must we allow for these dangerous distractions? Why must we excuse people’s responsibility to drive safely? Why don’t we focus on educating and warning people about keeping their eyes on the road instead of pandering to the idiots who would prefer to use their cars as mobile offices?

It drives me bonkers whenever we give people an excuse not to take responsibility for their actions and choices.

Making the yellow light sequence longer is not going to force people to become better drivers. They will just adapt to the longer time period and continue to be piss-poor drivers. Because bottom line? People nowadays don’t think about how their bad habits will affect other people. Because the world nowadays is all about ME, ME, ME.

People need to start caring, and respecting, other people. We need to start training people, because the message got lost somewhere over the years, to be courteous and polite to each other, both on and off the road. Pandering to people’s bad choices will never solve the problem.

Any problem.

General

Children in Joplin Missouri Really Need Our Help

Just saw this on Facebook and thought I would pass it on along here, too.

Just because the disaster is over in Joplin, doesn’t mean they are back to normal. The cleanup is just beginning and will continue for months. In the meantime, they still need our help.

Please consider Adopting an Eagle (Joplin’s mascot is the Eagle), or a Joplin classroom and help these poor children prepare to go back to school this Fall.


From the Joplin Schools’ website:

At 5:41 p.m. on Sunday, May 22, Joplin, Missouri was struck by a horrific EF-5 tornado. The Joplin area schools suffered casualities and major facility damage.

Joplin Schools began responding immediately. Our first priority was to account for all of our staff and students, then assess the damage. All students and staff were accounted for within one week of the tornado, but the numbers were grim.

Seven of our students and one Joplin Schools’ staff member were killed. Our thoughts and prayers go out to these families.

Joplin Schools pledges to do everything within our power to help our community rise up from this catastrophe. The damage to our schools was significant.

Just look how many schools were either completely destroyed or suffered structural damage:

Total Losses:
Franklin Technology Center, Irving Elementary School and Joplin High School

Still Pending Further Investigation by Insurance Company:
Old South Middle School, Emerson Elementary School and Joplin East Middle School

Suffered Significant Damage:
Cecil Floyd Elementary School and Roi S. Wood Administration Building

Suffered Minor Damage:
Kelsey Norman Elementary School and Duquesne Elementary School

Thank God this tornado didn’t happen during school hours. Can you imagine how many children would have been injured and/or killed? It’s a truly horrifying thought.

Joplin Schools is rebuilding and reassuring our families that school will begin on August 17. Actual reconstruction began May 26. Students and parents will continue to receive the high quality education they deserve and expect.

There are challenges ahead, but a new day has begun at Joplin Schools. People make the difference and we invite you to join us.

The schools weren’t the only thing destroyed in Joplin – approximately 30% of the city was destroyed, too. If you would like to help with the cleanup efforts and/or help Joplin rebuild, the Rebuild Joplin website is a good place to start.

We are personally going to try and help at least two students with back-to-school supplies and possibly some supplies for a few teachers, as well. Won’t you join me in helping our children go back to school this Fall?

Book Corner

Spring Reading Challenge ’11 Wrap Up

It’s time to wrap up Katrina’s 2011 Spring Reading Challenge over at Callapidder Days.

(You can read my original post here).

This is about my second (or third?) time participating in the reading challenges but my first time to actually meet my reading goals. I don’t know, I was HUNGRY to read this go-around. I’m really going to try and spend my time reading as opposed to surfing the Internet – it’s a much more productive use of my time (though I won’t necessarily say more interesting because you guys? Are a pretty interesting bunch of people). I ended up reading a total of 13 books.

Here is the list of books and a short blurb about my thoughts on the books. The ** signifies that the book was added onto my original list.

  • One True Thing by Anna Quindlen
    Have you seen the movie? It has Meryl Streep and Renee Zellweger in it. I can honestly say this is one movie I’m not interested in seeing. The book was depressing enough. And somehow, though these actresses are great, I wonder just how true to character they would portray them. Quindlen’s work is heavy on the emotions and thick with pretty descriptions but I enjoy her work, overall. I just have to have a lot of patience to read her work.
  • Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
    What can I say? I enjoy The Hunger Games Trilogy. And I’ll be the first to admit, I’m looking forward to the movies simply because it’ll be interesting to see how they bring it to the screen (these stories have a lot of bloody action). I think the premise behind these stories is pure genius. Collins does a spectacular job of producing moral dilemmas and displaying raw emotions. I really enjoyed how she tortured her characters (quite literally, actually) and was then rewarded with their reactions.
  • 1st to Die by James Patterson
    This is my first exposure to the Women’s Murder Club and I’m hooked. I bought the 2nd through the 4th books at the library sale this past spring and I’m looking forward to reading them. I think the mix of different female roles in this story really added an interesting element to the story and really gave the mystery a human face.
  • The Girl Who Played with Fire by Stieg Larsson
    I’m also looking forward to watching the movie adaptation of this story, too. I watched the first movie and they did a really good job sticking to the story – which is really saying a lot considering Larsson is a very thorough writer. His stories take a bit of patience, they generally start out slow, but they soon pick up and of course, Lisbeth is a force to be reckoned with – I’d hate to get on her bad side. I already have the third book in this trilogy and I’m looking forward to seeing how Lisbeth’s story plays out.
  • Daddy’s Girl by Lisa Scottoline
    I really enjoy reading writers who were a professional first before becoming writers (like lawyers, doctors, etc). I think Scottoline’s law experience really adds another dimension to her stories. It also gives her stories authenticity. I also appreciate how concise her writing is as well – you can tell the woman knows her way around the English language. I’m on a mission to read all of her work.
  • Die for Me by Karen Rose
    This story was recommended to me by one of the Write Anything writers. I REALLY enjoyed how the story was told through four different POV’s. This sounds confusing, but Rose does a good job keeping everything straight and the multiple POV’s really added depth to the story. I’d really like to incorporate this style in my own writing as I find writing multiple POV’s challenging and quite fun. Now if I can only handle it half as well as Rose did.
  • Dear John by Nicholas Sparks
    I have to be honest, I don’t particularly care for Sparks’ writing. I think his writing is a bit stale and geared more toward telling as opposed to showing. However, his stories are quite compelling and very emotional and Sparks does a good job tapping into our basic need for solid and meaningful relationships. I have to sort of mentally pump myself up whenever I read his work because his writing really does bug me and it’s sort of emotionally draining. But, I’m learning from his ability to tell an interesting story because obviously people like him and I can learn from that attraction. I’m going to try and read all of his work, too.
  • ** Chocolat by Joanne Harris
    I saw the movie with Johnny Depp (*DROOL*) and was naturally curious to read the book. This is one of those few times that I actually liked the movie more than the book. The screenwriter inserted a love story between Vianne and Roux and though it was only a secondary story line, I thought it really gave the story an interesting twist (and I’m a sucker for romance, obviously). The real story, of course, was the spiritual battle between one’s duty to God and one’s natural inclination to be tempted with worldly pleasures (in this case, the sweet temptation of chocolate and other sweets). I ADORED the movie and really enjoyed Harris’ interesting and somewhat tormented characters.
  • ** Meet Me in Venice by Elizabeth Adler
    I enjoyed how Adler weaved two different stories into one. I also thought it was fun how the two main characters never actually met before one of them was killed. Adler does a really good job at keeping the reader interested in both the story and in compelling characters. The ending was a bit contrived and ho hum, but overall, it was a story worth reading.
  • ** The Secret Life of Bees by Sue Monk Kidd
    I have to say, I don’t care for the title of this story, at all. It sounds like a boring documentary about the life of bees, but I’m glad I ignored my initial aversion to the title and read the story. It’s a period piece that takes place back in the Civil rights days, so the language is a bit off putting, but appropriate given the time period. This story is character driven, not plot driven, but somehow, that doesn’t slow it down. I couldn’t help but feel sorry for Lily, for all children in her situation, actually, but it was satisfying to see her character grow and mature and for her story to resolve itself. The characters surrounding Lily were also really interesting and they made this story, in my opinion. I watched the movie, mainly because I really like Queen Latifah and Dakota Fanning, but the screenplay was pretty true to the book and worth watching.
  • ** The Guy Not Taken by Jennifer Weiner
    This was a series of short stories so don’t expect to shut the book with any sort of satisfaction because a lot of the stories leave you hanging and not really a desire to read more. It was like Weiner compiled some of her warm-up stories and put them into a book – they weren’t bad, but not really good, either. I’m not a big fan of short stories (which is ironic considering I like writing short stories) and though I wouldn’t read this book again, it was worth a quick look.
  • ** Eclipse by Stephenie Meyer
    Ah, the story of Belle and Edward. I’m not a big vampire fan. But as with so many other people, I’ve gotten sucked (pardon the pun) into the Belle and Edward story. I’ve posted my thoughts on the Twilight series here and here, so I won’t rehash that on this post. I thought it was interesting that we spend so much more time following Jacob’s story in this book. I guess Meyers wanted to show her readers Belle’s love struggle – though I never really get a sense that Belle loves Jacob anymore than a good friend, her clear obsession with Edward is almost sick in it’s intensity, but still, I suppose she had to throw a wrench in there at some point because it truly is exhausting to watch two characters nearly destroy themselves over their love for each other. I have the movie in my Netflix queue and will be watching it shortly. Fun fact: Kevin is pretty hooked on the Twilight stories, too. Which REALLY surprises me, actually.
  • ** The Sinner by Tess Gerritsen
    Gerritsen is an ex (?) doctor who writes medical thrillers. As with Scottoline, I really enjoy her stories because you can just tell the woman knows what she’s talking about, which lends an air of credibility to her stories. To spice things up, Gerritsen writes her stories centered around two strong women, one a cop and the other a medical examiner, which gives the reader two different perspectives on the same situation. At the same time, these two women have their own personal problems and though I can appreciate Gerritsen writing in some of their drama, I do find myself getting a little impatient with the detours and wish she would stick a little more to the case at hand. But her writing is interesting and pretty fast-paced so it keeps my attention. I personally admire Gerritsen and Scottoline and would like to fashion my own writing after them.

Thanks for sticking this post out. Reviews aren’t always the most interesting, unless you’re a book worm, like myself. A lot of these books are available to buy (for cheap!!) in my Amazon book store, just click on the links and it will take you there.

I hope you find some time to read this summer and I’ll see you at the Fall Reading Challenge!

More from Write From Karen

Abundant Life

Audio Teaching: Jesus Christ Our Approach Offering

by John Schoenheit
Even a casual reading of the Old Testament indicates that God did not seem very accessible to the believers living then. This became very clear once the Tabernacle was built in the weeks after the Israelites’ exodus from Egypt. Although it gave people a place to worship God, it also clearly kept them apart from Him. High curtains separated the people even from the courtyard where offerings were burned to God. Only the High Priest could enter the Holy of Holies, where God dwelled between the cherubim, and even he got to go in only one day a year.

He took so much incense that even if the place was well lighted (which it certainly was not) he could not see anything anyway. When the Israelites did come to God, they were to bring an offering, which the Hebrew text of Leviticus calls “an approach offering.” One of the great works of Jesus Christ was to remove all the distance between God and the people and give each believer welcome access into the very presence of God. This teaching goes into some detail on the setup and operation of the Tabernacle, explains the offerings in Leviticus, and then expounds important verses in the book of Hebrews that pertain to the work of Christ.

Click the arrow to listen.

Transcription | Related Topics

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