ARTICLES - HOT OFF THE FAGGOT

Killer psalm? Bible verse deemed as threat on Obama's life

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Killer psalm? Bible verse deemed as threat on Obama's life

Sheriff's deputy left out Scripture interpreted as danger to president

By Drew Zahn




© 2011 WorldNetDaily


What started as an attempt to be "funny" has led to an investigation and suspension without pay for a Florida sheriff's deputy who labeled a passage of Scripture as "the Obama prayer."

Sgt. Matthew Neu of the Manatee County Sheriff's Office had left a Bible behind on a co-worker's desk with a note designating Psalm 109 as "the Obama prayer," according to an internal-affairs investigation reported by the Bradenton Herald.

Psalms 109:8 reads, "May his days be few; may another take his place of leadership."

The co-worker, a sergeant who discovered the note, took offense when she learned the passage was not supportive of the president, fearing instead the prayer constituted a threat against Obama's life.

According to the investigation report, after she read the psalm, "she thought whoever left it wanted Obama dead, that the supporting verses underneath verse 8, [which were] highlighted, confirm that."

The psalm goes on to read, "May his children be fatherless and his wife a widow. May his children be wandering beggars; may they be driven from their ruined homes. May a creditor seize all he has; may strangers plunder the fruits of his labor. May no one extend kindness to him or take pity on his fatherless children. May his descendants be cut off, their names blotted out from the next generation."

Neu denied that he was threatening the president, telling investigators, "In hindsight maybe it was not the smart thing to do, you know, I should have been more careful where I left it, or whatever."

Neu further told investigators that he had received "the Obama prayer" joke in an email and had passed it on, admitting, "he thought it was funny, even though maybe it was not in good taste."

According to the Herald, the internal-affairs investigation uncovered a history of political attitudes and pranks around the office. Another sergeant reported Neu had said negative things about Obama during the election, and Neu reported his co-workers had swapped in a photo of Obama on his computer's screensaver about the same time.


Neu reportedly told investigators of the Bible he left behind, "It's not a threat on the president. It was a joke on the Internet that I just happened to circle and go through 'cause I was gonna show people. ... There's no racial hate or anything like that involved in it. Do I like Obama as a president? No."

The Herald reports Neu was disciplined for violating sheriff's office guidelines for conduct unbecoming.

Psalm 109 is a prayer of David complaining about the "wicked and deceitful" who have falsely accused him "with words of hatred." David asks that God would punish the evildoers by making their days "few" and then cries out for deliverance.

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High Tide: From Playing Defense On Wikileaks To An ‘Amnesty’ Offer

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High Tide: From Playing Defense On Wikileaks To An ‘Amnesty’ Offer

By Samuel Rubenfeld

A roundup of corruption-related news from Dow Jones and other sources.
Mike Lucas for Dow Jones

Cables continue to reveal corruption-related news: Boeing Co. rejected advances from third-party negotiators to help them sell jets to world leaders.  A team of 15 to 20 officials at Bank of America are scouring for documents that could potentially reveal whether a breach was committed that may result in a Wikileaks trove. The International Criminal Court’s chief prosecutor confirmed reports that his office told diplomats about the evidence of accusations against Sudan’s president, who allegedly skimmed as much as $9 billion from the country and stashed it in foreign bank accounts. Some of Bulgaria’s most popular soccer teams have ties with mafia bosses, who use them to launder money. Afghan President Hamid Karzai rejected a request by U.S officials to remove a former warlord from atop the energy and water ministry a year ago because they considered him corrupt and ineffective, and threatened to end aid unless he went. (NY Times, NY Times, NY Times, Bangkok Post, AP)

Bribery:


Paying bribes has become a way of life for many ordinary Syrians. (BBC)


The FCPA Blog released its 2010 enforcement index.


Opposition party officials in the Australian government attacked two top executives of the company rolling out Australia’s national broadband network for not taking responsibility for the international corruption scand at Alcatel, where one was a board member and the other an executive at the subsidiary at the center of the scandal. A statement from the national broadband company said the actions of those involved in the scandal were outside the two executives’ jurisdiction. (Sydney Morning Herald)


Lessons from the Alcatel case. (Malaysia Kini)


India’s Central Bureau of Investigation filed bribery charges against a postmaster general nearly 10 months after arresting him. He doesn’t appear to have been contacted for comment. (Indian Express)


Algeria’s oil ministry vowed to tighten internal controls at state-owned Sonatrach, after a corruption scandal rocked the company early last year. (Dow Jones Newswires)


Money Laundering:


Compliance Building takes a look at the new Vatican Bank AML regulations.


Angola’s central bank will begin operating a financial information unit in the first quarter of 2011 tasked with fighting money laundering and the funding of terrorism. (Antimoneylaundering.us)


Documents unearthed by the St. Petersburg Times say, according to its report, that Florida Republican party head Jim Greer used a shell company called Victory Strategies to funnel money back to himself. Greer was arrested in June 2010 and charged with six felony counts of theft, money laundering and orchestrating a scheme to defraud. He released an aggressive statement in response to the report, saying he looks forward to the “the truth coming out and addressing the false accusations.”


The U.S. Department of Homeland Security is sending 52 more agents to Afghanistan to fight smuggling, an effort due in part to billions of dollars leaving the country every year. (NY Times)


Pakistan’s central bank has tightened regulations for micro-finance banks by increasing checks against money laundering and terrorism financing. (The News International)


The monetary board of Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas decided to update all of its rules on money laundering instead of consolidating AML regulations. (Manila Bulletin Publishing Corporation)


Sanctions:


African leaders will try once again to convince Ivory Coast President Laurent Gbagbo to step aside, and several African nations are willing to offer him amnesty if he does. (Wall Street Journal, BBC)


Central bank officials from India and Iran were due to meet on Friday to try to keep their oil trade running, after New Delhi banned Tehran from using a major clearinghouse in a bid to comply with international embargoes. (Reuters)


Whistleblowers:


The informant who revealed the tainted medicine being produced by GlaxoSmithKline gave her first TV interview to CBS News’ “60 Minutes.”


Terrorism Finance:


Mali is trying to stop Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb from forming a presence in the country. (NY Times)


General Anti-Corruption:


Corruption scandals continue to plague China’s Communist government despite an initiative to fight graft. (Washington Post)


FIFA’s president vowed to stamp out the corruption that plagued the voting for hosting the 2018 and 2022 World Cups. More here. (ESPN UK, Playthegame.org)


A senior Hero Group executive has been arrested for allegedly receiving a part of more than 3 billion rupees ($67 million) believed to have been misappropriated at a Citigroup Inc. bank branch on the outskirts of New Delhi. A spokesman for the company wasn’t immediately available for comment. (Dow Jones Newswires)


India will come out with a new telecommunications policy after a corruption scandal surrounding the sale of the 2G wireless spectrum rocked the agency. (Dow Jones Newswires)


Last week, Afghan President Hamid Karzai appointed a close ally to lead the country’s new top anti-corruption agency. (Wall Street Journal)

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Reformation limited church's power

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Reformation limited church's power

Ottawa Citizen

Re: Taking On The Reformation, Dec. 29.

David Warren appears to suggest that the Protestant Reformation was a negative happening and left us with myths that are confused with the truth. The truth is the Reformation saved us from the chokehold the Catholic Church had on our secular life and, with its imperial power, telling countries what they could or could not do with their affairs. So, I say thank God for Martin Luther, a most courageous man, and for the Protestant Reformation. These developments, among other changes, helped to address the corruption in the Catholic Church and limit its imperial power. Warren seems to ignore this corruption while hitting on the polity for this very thing. To exonerate the church from corruption boggles the mind.

I would suggest Warren would benefit his readers if he considered separating the church from the religion it delivers to us. Therein is the real issue. The church is, indeed, corrupt. The Catholic religion based on Christ's message is free standing. It is the church that has dogmatized it and moved us away from its essence.

Look at the church's history and that of the Vatican. How did it manage the recent sexual abuse pandemic? Using a cloak of secrecy for years and providing a safe haven for its clergy to prey on and sexually abuse young boys while saving its institutional image, is only one of the manifestations of corruption in it.

To leave his readers with the distorted message that the Protestant Reformation has left us with "myths" that are wrong and Mother Church unfairly labelled as corrupt needs to be challenged. The sexual abuse pandemic and the Church's response to it woke me up from my "blind faith slumber." At least now I can enjoy the benefits of secularism without worrying about the wailing of the Vatican about all the unholy effects of secularism on my life.

J. Ormond Stanton

Gananoque

, PhD

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The Gay Year in Review: Top LGBT-Related Stories from the Americas

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The Gay Year in Review: Top LGBT-Related Stories from the Americas

It was a banner year in the history of gay rights in the Americas. Here are the top-20 LGBT-related stories.

20) Open Doors: United States. The law that banned HIV-positive non-U.S. citizens from traveling or immigrating to the United States officially ended. The ban began as policy in 1987 and became law in 1993 (January 2010).


19) The Gay Man and the Sea: Peru. Gay director Javier Fuentes-León’s film, Contracorriente, about a love story between a fisherman married to a woman and his secret affair with a man, wins the Audience Award for World Cinema at the Sundance film festival (February).


18) An alternative Bolsa Escola: Brazil. Escola Jovem LGBT, Latin America’s first “school of gay arts,” as principal Deco Rebeiro describes it, opens in Campinas. The school was spearheaded by a Brazilian NGO and is financed by the state’s secretary of culture and Brazil’s ministry of culture (March).


17) Wings for all: Chile. LAN Airlines becomes an official sponsor of the San Francisco Gay Pride Parade, the first time a Latin American airline sponsors a U.S. pride celebration (June).


16) La niña bonita: Cuba. Mariela Castro, daughter of Cuba's President Raúl Castro, marched along with hundreds of activates in an LGBT march celebrating the International Day Against Homophobia in Havana (May).


15) Negative campaigning: Chile. The government’s National Service for Woman launched a new ad campaign to fight violence against women with the slogan: “Faggot is he who beats a woman [maricón es el que maltrata a una mujer].” The largest LGBT organization (MOVILH) approved the use of the word faggot in the ads, arguing that in Chile the term refers mostly to a “non-transparent” person rather than to a homosexual and thus, using the term is not homophobic. Others thought the campaign was homophobic. Shortly after the campaign started, variations of the expression (e.g., “faggot is he who photoshops his picture") were widely tweeted across the country (October).


14) Good words: El Salvador. President Mauricio Funes issues a presidential decree banning discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity in the public service (May).


13) Beyond words: Brazil. Government creates the National LGBT Council, a specialized agency to protect the rights of the LGBT community.


12) In the dark: Vatican City/Santiago, Chile. The Vatican's second-highest authority, Cardinal Tarciso Bertone, says during a news conference in Chile that the sex scandals haunting the Roman Catholic Church are linked to homosexuality and not celibacy among priests. "Many psychologists and psychiatrists have demonstrated that there is no relation between celibacy and pedophilia. But many others have demonstrated, I have been told recently, that there is a relation between homosexuality and pedophilia.”


11) Fit to a T: Costa Rica. The Supreme Electoral Court publishes a resolution allowing transsexuals to appear on their national ID with the image they “frequently display” to society. This victory for the LGBT community was a reply to a demand from a male transsexual citizen, Andrey Porras Araya, to appear in his photograph as a female.


10) Evo-lutionary science: Bolivia. Speaking at an environmental conference, Evo Morales claimed that both homosexuality and baldness can be caused by the humble chicken. Chicken producers injected fowl with female hormones and insisted that "when men eat those chickens they experience deviances in being men."


9) Fallen heroes: United States. Iowans voted to remove three of the state’s Supreme Court justices, following the court’s ruling last year that legalized same-sex marriage in the state. The vote marks the first time Iowa voters have removed a Supreme Court justice since the current system began in 1962 (November).


8) Rising Heroes: Costa Rica. The Constitutional Court ordered the Supreme Elections Tribunal to discontinue preparations for a referendum scheduled for December to allow voters to decide on the future of civil unions. The referendum was petitioned by Observatorio de la Familia, a conservative group. The referendum was supported by the Catholic Church, and 150,000 voters who signed the petition to hold the referendum.


7) YouTube gets better: United States. In response to a number of students taking their lives after being bullied in school for issues pertaining to sexuality, syndicated columnist and writer Dan Savage and his partner Terry launch the “It Gets Better Project.” The project consists of creating short YouTube videos by celebrities telling young LGBT adults that that life gets better with time. By the end of 2010, the project received 5,000 YouTube submissions (September).


6) Mea Culpa, Mea Cuba: Cuba. Former president Fidel Castro, in an interview to a reporter from La Jornada, took responsibility for the persecution of Cuban gays. He admitted that there were great injustices committed against the gay community. “If someone is responsible, it’s me,” he said (August).


5) When all else fails: OAS/Chile. The Inter-American Court of Human Rights of the OAS ruled that Karen Atala had suffered discrimination when the courts stripped her of custody over her three children in 2004 for being in a lesbian relationship, ordering Chile to compensate Atala.


4) Virtù e fortuna: Puerto Rico. Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin comes out publicly by posting a message on website stating: ‘I am a fortunate homosexual man.”


3) "In the Navy...": United States. The Senate repeals “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” which for 17 years allowed gays to serve in the military as long as they kept their sexual orientation secret. The repeal means that gays can serve in the military openly. The repeal shows the enduring partisan divide: only 8 Republican senators voting Yea, 31 voting Nay (including former presidential candidate Sen. John McCain), and 3 not voting. All Democrats voted Yea, except one who did not vote (December).


2)The city and the pillar: Mexico. In an 8-2 vote, the nation’s supreme court declares that same-sex marriages in Mexico City are constitutionally valid (August).


1) Tangomania: Argentina. Argentina became the first Latin American country (and the second country below Parallel 30, after South Africa) to legalize same-sex marriage. Fighting pressure from the Catholic and Evangelical churches, which mobilized protest marches, the government won Senate approval for new legislation that modifies article 2 of the Argentine Civil Code, which established matrimony as being between two individuals of different gender. The law replaces the expression "man and woman" with "couple". Homosexuals will have the same rights as heterosexuals, including the right to adopt, inheritance, pension rights, and other rights relating to social security. The Senate vote was 33 to 27 in favor of the measure (July).


*Javier Corrales is Professor of Political Science at Amherst College and co-editor of The Politics of Sexuality in Latin America (University of Pittsburgh Press, 2010). He serves on the editorial board of Americas Quarterly.

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Police under scrutiny in abuse inquiry for Irish diocese

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Police under scrutiny in abuse inquiry for Irish diocese

An official inquiry into the handling of sex-abuse complaints in the Diocese of Cloyne, Ireland, has focused on the conduct of the Gardai (police), the Sunday Business Post reports.


The newspaper reports that a commission headed by Judge Yvonne Murphy-- who previously led an investigation of the Dublin archdiocese-- found that the Gardai had failed to inform child-care authorities about an abuse complaint.


Bishop John Magee reportedly believed that he had done his duty by informing the Gardai of the complaint. The bishop, who was harshly criticized for failing to disclose sex-abuse complaints, submitted his resignation in March 2010. The Vatican has not yet named his successor.


The investigative commission delivered its report to Irish justice minister Dermot Ahern in December. The report will not be made public for several weeks, as prosecutors must determine whether the contents could prejudice any pending criminal cases.

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Pope Benedict: Revive the Roman Empire!

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Pope Benedict: Revive the Roman Empire!
Ron Fraser
Pope Benedict is beginning to reveal the true motives of his papacy. It is firmly attached to a revival of the ancient Holy Roman Empire!


Two general views, one about the Roman Catholic Church, the other about the European Union, circulated via shallow, amateurish analyses, became fashionable in 2010.


On the one hand, puerile punditry predicted the weakening of the Catholic Church through the widely publicized views that rampant pedophilia and a pope seen to be out of touch with reality were weakening the power of the Vatican. On the other, terribly thin analyses of the euro crisis rampant across the European Union maintained that the EU was about to fail as an effective potential world power.


In each case, nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, both entities are actually being strengthened by their respective current crises.


Regarding the EU, our editor in chief debunked the prospect of its weakening in a powerful exposé of just what the immediate outcome of the euro crisis will be in his personal titled “A Monumental Moment in European History!” in the February edition of the Trumpet magazine.


With regard to the current and potentially increasing power of the Vatican, the text of Pope Benedict’s address to the Roman Curia, delivered December 20, gives real pause for thought to any real student of history, let alone of Bible prophecy.


During that speech, the pope made some rather startling statements. Early on he declared, “Excita, Domine, potentiam tuam, et veni. Repeatedly during the season of Advent the church’s liturgy prays in these or similar words. They are invocations that were probably formulated as the Roman Empire was in decline. The disintegration of the key principles of law and of the fundamental moral attitudes underpinning them burst open the dams which until that time had protected peaceful coexistence among peoples. The sun was setting over an entire world. Frequent natural disasters further increased this sense of insecurity. There was no power in sight that could put a stop to this decline.”


Take a close look at that statement. Here the pope is theorizing that the decline of the Roman Empire was responsible for the failure of the rule of Roman law and the cohesion of society, “the peaceful coexistence among peoples” that ostensibly ensued through the Roman imperial epoch. He infers that the decline of Roman hegemony led to the collapse of civilization at the time.


Benedict then goes on to infer that the state of the world today parallels that which prevailed at the time of the decline and fall of the Roman Empire.


Excita, Domine, potentiam tuam, et veni. Today too, we have many reasons to associate ourselves with this Advent prayer of the church. For all its new hopes and possibilities, our world is at the same time troubled by the sense that moral consensus is collapsing, consensus without which juridical and political structures cannot function. Consequently the forces mobilized for the defense of such structures seem doomed to failure” (ibid.).


A careful reading of this pope’s various homilies, encyclicals and addresses to his followers reveals his intention to mobilize his European congregation for the defense and the revival of Rome’s juridical and political structures as a means of reshaping global order. Nowhere is this intent more clearly revealed than in his December 20 address.


In his address to the curia, the pope posed his solution to the world’s current woes, a solution that sees the Roman Catholic religion at its very heart. In a crusading rallying cry to the Roman Curia, he laid down the gauntlet at the feet of the princes of the church, asking that they “wake … from the sleep of a faith grown tired, and to restore to that faith the power to move mountains—that is, to order justly the affairs of the world.”


Do you really grasp the true import of just what Pope Benedict xvi is proposing here? He is clearly indicating that only the religion of Rome offers the solution to global disorder, by demonstrating its power to “order … the affairs of the world”! That bespeaks a resurrection of “holy” Roman imperial power!


From the very beginning of his papacy—in the same vein as his predecessor Pope John Paul ii—Pope Benedict has called for a new crusade of Roman Catholicism to sweep Europe and return it to its “holy” Roman roots. That cry has grown more intense, more insistent and been delivered more regularly with the passing of each year of Benedict’s papacy. Now, in what is his clearest, most articulate condemnation of priestly pedophilia, the pope has challenged the entire Roman Curia to clean up the church and revive its power to “move mountains.” Full well Benedict knows this is but theological language for a revival of Rome’s power to move entire nations! The real implication is that this pope is clearly calling for a powerful crusade to be led by the princes of the church for a revival of Rome’s power to reshape global order.


But in all subsequent resurrections of Rome’s crusading, world-shaping power, while Rome provided the ideological foundation for those crusades, one other European nation historically rendered to it the military capability to enforce its ideology—the source of “the key principles of law and of the fundamental moral attitudes underpinning them”—upon its constituents: Germany.


Thus, to the keen-eyed observers of history and, most especially, Bible prophecy, it is no mere coincidence that Pope Benedict is rallying his papal troops to this crusade to reshape the global order at the same time that Germany has patently become the nation intent on reshaping the order of Rome’s principal constituency—Europe—to its own design.


This is epochal history in the making.


We now see a German elite and a papal elite preparing to join forces in this seventh, and final, resurrection of that old Holy Roman Empire exactly as prophesied by Herbert W. Armstrong.


You really do need to face up to the challenge to prove Herbert Armstrong was right! The knowledge that today’s events in Rome, Berlin and Brussels were actually prophesied millennia ago is an eye-opener indeed. But what is even more inspiring is to truly understand the prophecies as to just where today’s events are leading. For, indeed, the whole world order is currently being reshaped. The results will prove disastrous to an Anglo-Saxon peoples waxed fat, indolent, morally corrupt and spiritually blind since God saved them from being overtaken by tyranny 70 years ago. But though cataclysmic in the short term, this will be but a massive sign of the imminence of the return of the only One who can truly reshape the global order under the key principles of God’s immutable law and of the fundamental moral attitudes it engenders!


Read our booklet He Was Right and begin to get a true and insightful perspective on the reshaping of today’s global order, how it will impact you and your loved ones and the massive reshaping of this world’s systems that will follow!

Ron Fraser’s column appears every Monday.
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U.S. tried to punish critics of genetically-modified food

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U.S. tried to punish critics of genetically-modified food

American diplomats urged Washington to punish European countries that opposed the growth of genetically-modified crops, according to leaked cables.

The U.S. embassy in Paris said retaliation should be taken to cause ‘some pain across the EU’ to any governments resisting the spread of the technology.

The diplomatic message was in the latest cache of secret cables made public by the whistleblower website WikiLeaks.

Anti-GM food protesters make their mark by lying naked in a West Sussex field to make the sign

Anti-GM food protesters make their mark by lying naked in a West Sussex field to make the sign "No GM". US diplomats urged Washington to punish European countries that opposed the growth of genetically-modified crops, it has emerged

The request came in response to moves by France in 2007 to ban a GM corn made by American biotechnology giant Monsanto.

U.S. ambassador Craig Stapleton, a close friend and business partner of then President George Bush, said the White House should launch a military-style trade war against GM sceptics in Europe.

A close friend of then President George Bush, U.S. ambassador Craig Stapleton, said the White House should launch a military-style trade war against GM sceptics in Europe

A close friend of then President George Bush, U.S. ambassador Craig Stapleton, said the White House should launch a military-style trade war against GM sceptics in Europe

‘Country team Paris recommends that we calibrate a target retaliation list that causes some pain across the EU since this is a collective responsibility, but that also focuses in part on the worst culprits,’ he wrote.

‘The list should be measured rather than vicious and must be sustainable over the long term, since we should not expect an early victory.

‘Moving to retaliation will make clear that the current path has real costs to EU interests and could help strengthen European pro-biotech voices,’ added the ambassador, who co-owned the Texas Rangers baseball team in the 1990s with Mr Bush.

The WikiLeaks cables also showed that America put pressure on the Pope’s advisers because of the vehement opposition from some Catholic bishops to GM foods in developing countries.

Messages urged for the Pope to be lobbied to go public with his supposed support for the crops.

‘Opportunities exist to press the issue with the Vatican, and in turn to influence a wide segment of the population in Europe and the developing world,’ read one cable from the U.S. embassy in the Vatican.

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Two self-described ‘Catholic’ organizations challenge Church authority days before Christmas

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Dissent takes no holiday

Two self-described ‘Catholic’ organizations challenge Church authority days before Christmas

A few days before Christmas, two voices of Catholic dissent issued statements challenging the Church – one in defiance of the Vatican, the other in defiance of an American bishop.



The first statement came on Dec. 21 by Jon O’Brien, president of “Catholics for Choice,” formerly named “Catholics for a Free Choice,” a group previously denounced by the US Conference of Catholic Bishops.



O’Brien’s statement came after the Vatican’s Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith issued a lengthy clarification regarding Pope Benedict’s widely misinterpreted statement regarding the use of condoms, which, said the CDF, had been “manipulated for ends and interests which are entirely foreign to the meaning of his words.” The pope had not, said the CDF, changed any aspect of the Church’s moral teaching or its pastoral practice regarding the use of condoms.



But O’Brien challenged the statement by the Vatican’s highest doctrinal authority. The CDF statement about “what the pope did or did not say changes nothing about the significance of Pope Benedict's initial game-changing remarks,” said O’Brien.



"Catholics for Choice is clear that the pope's continued worldview regarding sex and sexuality remains seriously out of touch with the practices and beliefs of the majority of Catholics around the world,” said O’Brien. “Whether Pope Benedict likes it or not, Catholics already believe that condoms help prevent the spread of HIV.”



"What is clear is that over the short few weeks since his remarks conservatives have been scrambling to try to shore up the ultraconservative mantra that condoms do not help prevent the spread of HIV -- a myth that was debunked by none other than the pope,” O’Brien continued. “The statement today is a desperate attempt by those in the Vatican to hold back the tide. However, while change occurs in the Vatican at a glacial rate, change is what Catholics heard when the pope spoke about condoms. Rearguard actions by the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith are unlikely to put the genie back in the bottle or the condoms back in the packet."



While Catholics for Choice may garner notice among those in the secular media unfamiliar with the Catholic Church, practicing Catholics should know the group O’Brien leads has been roundly denounced by U.S. bishops. In 2000, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops issued a statement saying Catholics for Choice (then called Catholics for a Free Choice) “is not a Catholic organization, does not speak for the Catholic Church, and in fact promotes positions contrary to the teaching of the Church.” The organization, said the bishops, is “an arm of the abortion lobby in the United States and throughout the world.”



The second statement was issued on Dec. 22 by Sr. Carol Keehan in her capacity as president and CEO of the Catholic Health Association of the US. Keehan’s statement openly challenged a decision by Phoenix Bishop Thomas Olmsted to strip a Catholic Healthcare West hospital operating in his diocese of its “Catholic” designation for violating the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services.



“Catholic Healthcare West and its system hospitals are valued members of the Catholic Health Association,” said Sr. Keehan’s statement. “Their long and stellar history in the protection of life at all stages is well known.”



Sr. Keehan – like Catholic Healthcare West – substituted her own judgment for that of the bishop. “St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix has many programs that reach out to protect life,” she said. “They had been confronted with a heartbreaking situation. They carefully evaluated the patient's situation and correctly applied the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services to it, saving the only life that was possible to save.”



According to a Christian Newswire item published Dec. 23, Sr. Keehan’s statement – and the position taken by the Catholic Health Care Association -- set "a dangerous precedent, and could presage a further secularization of Catholic health care."



Leonard J. Nelson, III, a professor at the Cumberland School of Law of Samford University, and affiliated scholar with the Lister Hill Center for Health Policy at the University of Alabama at Birmingham School of Public Health, reported Christian Newswire, said that for Catholics it falls on the bishop, as successor of the Apostles, to be the ultimate authority on interpreting moral law in his diocese.



“He made his remarks after the CHA, an association of some 600 Catholic hospitals nationwide, said it sided with St. Joseph Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix, Ariz., in judging the morality of the controversial termination of a pregnancy,” said the Christian Newswire report. “After months of failed talks, the bishop removed the hospital's right to call itself Catholic.”



“The litmus test for determining whether a hospital is Catholic is whether it adheres to the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Health Care Services as interpreted by the local diocesan bishop,” said Nelson, according to Christian Newswire. “It is not the prerogative of the hospital; the facility's owner, Catholic Healthcare West (CWH); members of its ethics committee; or officials at the Catholic Health Association to provide authoritative interpretations of the moral law: that is the role of the bishop as successor of the Apostles. This defiance of Bishop Olmsted's authority is setting a dangerous precedent, and could presage a further secularization of Catholic health care.”
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WikiLeaks: US targets EU over GM crops

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WikiLeaks: US targets EU over GM crops

US embassy cable recommends drawing up list of countries for 'retaliation' over opposition to genetic modification

John Vidal, environment editor
Genetically modified corn in a test tube
The US embassy in Paris wanted to penalise the EU after France moved to ban a Monsanto GM corn variety. Photograph: Sipa Press/Rex Features

The US embassy in Paris advised Washington to start a military-style trade war against any European Union country which opposed genetically modified (GM) crops, newly released WikiLeaks cables show.

In response to moves by France to ban a Monsanto GM corn variety in late 2007, the ambassador, Craig Stapleton, a friend and business partner of former US president George Bush, asked Washington to penalise the EU and particularly countries which did not support the use of GM crops.

"Country team Paris recommends that we calibrate a target retaliation list that causes some pain across the EU since this is a collective responsibility, but that also focuses in part on the worst culprits.

"The list should be measured rather than vicious and must be sustainable over the long term, since we should not expect an early victory. Moving to retaliation will make clear that the current path has real costs to EU interests and could help strengthen European pro-biotech voices," said Stapleton, who with Bush co-owned the St Louis-based Texas Rangers baseball team in the 1990s.

In other newly released cables, US diplomats around the world are found to have pushed GM crops as a strategic government and commercial imperative.

Because many Catholic bishops in developing countries have been vehemently opposed to the controversial crops, the US applied particular pressure to the pope's advisers.

Cables from the US embassy in the Vatican show that the US believes the pope is broadly supportive of the crops after sustained lobbying of senior Holy See advisers, but regrets that he has not yet stated his support. The US state department special adviser on biotechnology as well as government biotech advisers based in Kenya lobbied Vatican insiders to persuade the pope to declare his backing. "… met with [US monsignor] Fr Michael Osborn of the Pontifical Council Cor Unum, offering a chance to push the Vatican on biotech issues, and an opportunity for post to analyse the current state of play on biotech in the Vatican generally," says one cable in 2008.

"Opportunities exist to press the issue with the Vatican, and in turn to influence a wide segment of the population in Europe and the developing world," says another.

But in a setback, the US embassy found that its closest ally on GM, Cardinal Renato Martino, head of the powerful Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace and the man who mostly represents the pope at the United Nations, had withdrawn his support for the US.

"A Martino deputy told us recently that the cardinal had co-operated with embassy Vatican on biotech over the past two years in part to compensate for his vocal disapproval of the Iraq war and its aftermath – to keep relations with the USG [US government] smooth. According to our source, Martino no longer feels the need to take this approach," says the cable.

In addition, the cables show US diplomats working directly for GM companies such as Monsanto. "In response to recent urgent requests by [Spanish rural affairs ministry] state secretary Josep Puxeu and Monsanto, post requests renewed US government support of Spain's science-based agricultural biotechnology position through high-level US government intervention."

It also emerges that Spain and the US have worked closely together to persuade the EU not to strengthen biotechnology laws. In one cable, the embassy in Madrid writes: "If Spain falls, the rest of Europe will follow."

The cables show that not only did the Spanish government ask the US to keep pressure on Brussels but that the US knew in advance how Spain would vote, even before the Spanish biotech commission had reported.



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If you thought things were bad with Schwarzenegger, Wait until Jesuit Jerry Brown is through.

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If you thought things were bad with Schwarzenegger,
Wait until Jerry Brown is through.
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Christian Group Says Apocalypse Coming on May 21, 2011

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Christian Group Says Apocalypse Coming on May 21, 2011

Breen
AP



RALEIGH, N.C. -- If there had been time, Marie Exley would have liked to start a family. Instead, the 32-year-old Army veteran has less than six months left, which she'll spend spreading a stark warning: Judgment Day is almost here.

Exley is part of a movement of Christians loosely organized by radio broadcasts and websites, independent of churches and convinced by their reading of the Bible that the end of the world will begin May 21, 2011.




Gerry Broome, AP
Allison Warden of Raleigh, N.C., posed last month with her car, showing a message about the rapture.



To get the word out, they're using billboards and bus stop benches, traveling caravans of RVs and volunteers passing out pamphlets on street corners. Cities from Bridgeport, Conn., to Little Rock, Ark., now have billboards with the ominous message, and mission groups are traveling through Latin America and Africa to spread the news outside the U.S.

"A lot of people might think, 'The end's coming, let's go party,'" said Exley, a veteran of two deployments in Iraq. "But we're commanded by God to warn people. I wish I could just be like everybody else, but it's so much better to know that when the end comes, you'll be safe."

In August, Exley left her home in Colorado Springs, Colo., to work with Oakland, Calif.-based Family Radio Worldwide, the independent Christian ministry whose leader, Harold Camping, has calculated the May 21 date based on his reading of the Bible.

She is organizing traveling columns of RVs carrying the message from city to city, a logistics challenge that her military experience has helped solve. The vehicles are scheduled to be in five North Carolina cities between now and the second week of January, but Exley will shortly be gone: overseas, where she hopes to eventually make it back to Iraq.

"I don't really have plans to come back," she said. "Time is short."

Not everyone who's heard Camping's message is taking such a dramatic step. They're remaining in their day-to-day lives, but helping publicize the prophecy in other ways. Allison Warden, of Raleigh, has been helping organize a campaign using billboards, post cards and other media in cities across the U.S. through a website, We Can Know.

The 29-year-old payroll clerk laughs when asked about reactions to the message, which is plastered all over her car.

"It's definitely against the grain, I know that," she said. "We're hoping people won't take our word for it, or Harold Camping's word for it. We're hoping that people will search the scriptures for themselves."

Camping, 89, believes the Bible essentially functions as a cosmic calendar explaining exactly when various prophecies will be fulfilled.

The retired civil engineer said all his calculations come from close readings of the Bible, but that external events like the foundation of the state of Israel in 1948 are signs confirming the date.

"Beyond the shadow of a doubt, May 21 will be the date of the Rapture and the day of judgment," he said.

The doctrine known as the Rapture teaches that believers will be taken up to heaven, while everyone else will remain on earth for a period of torment, concluding with the end of time. Camping believes that will happen in October.

"If May 21 passes and I'm still here, that means I wasn't saved. Does that mean God's word is inaccurate or untrue? Not at all," Warden said.

The belief that Christ will return to earth and bring an end to history has been a basic element of Christian belief since the first century. The Book of Revelation, which comes last in the New Testament, describes this conclusion in vivid language that has inspired Christians for centuries.

But few churches are willing to set a date for the end of the world, heeding Jesus' words in the gospels of Mark and Matthew that no one can know the day or hour it will happen. Predictions like Camping's, though, aren't new. One of the most famous in history was by the Baptist leader William Miller, who predicted the end for Oct. 22, 1844, which came to be known as the Great Disappointment among his followers, some of whom subsequently founded the Seventh Day Adventist church.

"In the U.S., there is still a significant population, mostly Protestant, who look at the Bible as kind of a puzzle, and the puzzle is God's word and it's predicting when the end times will come," said Catherine Wessinger, a professor at Loyola University in New Orleans who studies millennialism, the belief in pending apocalypse.


Sponsored Links"A lot of times these prophecies gain traction when difficulties are happening in society," she said. "Right now, there's a lot of insecurity, and this is a promise that says it's not all random, it's part of God's plan."

Past predictions that failed to come true don't have any bearing on the current calculation, believers maintain.

"It would be like telling the Wright brothers that every other attempt to fly has failed, so you shouldn't even try," said Chris McCann, who works with eBible Fellowship, one of the groups spreading the message.

For believers like McCann, theirs is actually a message of hope and compassion: God's compassion for people, and the hope that there's still time to be saved.

That, ultimately, is what spurs on Exley, who said her beliefs have alienated her from most of her friends and family. Her hope is that not everyone who hears her message will mock it, and that even people who dismiss her now might still come to believe.

"If you still want to say we're crazy, go ahead," she said. "But it doesn't hurt to look into it."
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Protestants, African-Americans and older people tend to report less anger at God

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Unbelievers also angry at God

CLEVELAND, Jan. 3 (UPI) -- Many people say they are "angry at God" -- even some who don't believe in God, a U.S. researcher says.

Julie Exline, a psychologist at Case Western Reserve University, says anger toward God often coincides with deaths, illnesses, accidents or natural disasters, as well as personal disappointments, failures or interpersonal hurts.

The study, published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, finds Protestants, African-Americans and older people tend to report less anger at God. People who do not believe in God may still harbor anger and anger toward God is most distressing when it is frequent, intense or chronic.

"Many people experience anger toward God," Exline says in a statement. "Even people who deeply love and respect God can become angry. Just as people become upset or angry with others, including loved ones, they can also become angry with God."

Overcoming anger at God, she says, may require some of the same steps needed to resolve other anger issues.

Exline has researched anger toward God during the past decade, conducting studies with hundreds of people, including college students, cancer survivors and grief-stricken family members.

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