"The only thing necessary for evil to triumph. Is for good men to stand by and do nothing."~Edmund Burke.I don't know about you but I'm not gonna let that happen.
PKforchrist
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Name: Austin
Birthday: 7/9/1989
Gender: Male


Interests: Serving Him, reading, history, playing basketball, government and politics, playing my violin and mandolin,working, hiking, camping and shooting.
Expertise: expressing my opinions and annoying people.
Occupation: student, landscaper and mainti


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Member Since: 4/13/2007

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Tuesday, July 08, 2008

A Beautiful Disaster.

My life is but a vapor.

This is what I’m told.

Here today and gone the next.

The question of how to live it leaves me vexed.

Questions unanswered, leave me confused.

Desires awakened, but my talent unused.

My Purpose feels hidden, shrouded in mist.

Often I wander if a Purpose exists.

Who am I? Where am I going?

Have I made the right choices?

Is there anyway of knowing?

The more questions I ask the less answers I receive.

My soul is in turmoil, emotions up heaved.

At the precipice I stand looking into the deep.

I fear to step out and take that huge leap.

Faith is never easy for an inquisitive mind.

And often I feel that my faith is blind.

A mustard seed I’m told is all that it takes.

Well I’ve tried moving mountains, and mine barely shake.

What it all comes down to is my faith is weak.

And this does not help with the Purpose I seek.

Jesus loves me this I know

For the Bible tells me so.

Cliché? Perhaps, but to this am I clinging.

The fact that I’m loved has my soul singing.

My talents are small barely worth wielding.

But I know God can use them.

To His Will am I yielding.


Thursday, July 03, 2008

Currently Reading
Hitlers Cross
By Erwin W. Lutzer
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How large of a role does patriotism play in your life?



   A large enough role I enlisted. Next to my salvation and my family my love for America is second. Followed by freinds and basketball.

I just answered this Featured Question, you can answer it too!


Monday, June 30, 2008

Imagine if you will...

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I saw this and thought it was one of the most brilliant things I have ever seen. Imagine if you will that the media that we have today existed during WWII. Would this be so far fetched? Please keep in mind the General Betray us article that ran in the NY Times.


Monday, June 23, 2008

Currently Reading
The Prince (Bantam Classics)
By Niccolo Machiavelli
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Christians must remember that they are a new creation.

THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 2008 YOU ARE HOLY HEBREWS 10:10 A survey published by the Barna Group in 2006 demonstrated that most American evangelicals don't consider themselves to be holy. The report states:
76% believe that it is possible for someone to become holy regardless of their past.
55% said that they knew someone they considered to be holy.
29% consider themselves to be holy.
It appears that believers are more convinced of their connection to their old nature than they are to their connection to their new nature. They're more aware of their acts of sinfulness than they are of their acts of righteousness. They're more aware of their failures than they are of their successes.
I suppose this makes sense. In the journey toward holiness, the ugliness of sin will stick out more, like a smudge on an otherwise beautiful painting. It is this awareness of sin that empowers us to fight it, reject it, and abandon it.
But let's not let ourselves be too aware of sin -- not in the sense that it defines us. Though we struggle with the old man, we must remember that who we really we are is defined by the gift of grace that God has lavished upon us. Hebrews says we have been made holy through the sacrifice of Jesus Christ (Hebrews 10:10) and through this sacrifice we are being made holy. (Hebrews 10:14)
The first reference describes our position: God declares us holy. The second reference describes our performance: God is conforming us into the image of Christ.
 
For this reason we must learn to see ourselves as God sees us: New creatures, created in Christ to become the righteousness of God. (2 Corinthians 5:21) Your struggles with sin -- the fact that sinful tendencies frustrate you -- are an indication of what God has already done in your life and where he is taking you today.

Pastor Jeff


Saturday, June 14, 2008

A Supreme Error!

By Fred Thompson

Townhall.com

Upon reading the opinion in Boumediene v Bush, one must conclude that the majority knew where they wanted to go and simply had to figure out how to get there. The trip was not a pretty one. How could it be when the justices seemingly wrote a map based on ideas cherry picked from over 400 years of established law and backfilled with justifications to create a new right for alien combatants that Americans themselves do not enjoy?

They could have saved us all a lot of time if they’d told us what was clearly on their minds.

They don’t trust military tribunals to deal with those accused of being enemy combatants, even if the tribunals are following guidelines established by Congress.

That the government has probably detained some prisoners at Guantanamo for longer than they should have.

And that Guantanamo should just be closed.

Though they are willing to give it lip service, they don’t really believe we are at war … at least not a “real” war.

Therefore, they should create a new right for our nation’s enemies commiserate with the displeasure that they and the rest of the “enlightened” people have with this “war,” Guantanamo and the Bush Administration.

At least this approach would have been an honest one and based upon about as much legal justification as the approach they took.

But, instead – as Justice Scalia pointed out in his dissent – they for the first time in our nation’s history, conferred a Constitutional right of habeas corpus on alien enemies detained abroad by our military forces in the course of an ongoing war – a broader right than has been given to our own citizens. The court majority did so acknowledging that they could find no precedent to confer such a right to alien enemies not within sovereign U.S. territory

The majority had simply decided that prior courts had denied such rulings based on “practical considerations.” In other words in prior cases and prior wars it had just been too inconvenient to bestow the right of habeas corpus upon non-citizens in foreign jurisdictions. So, by focusing on what they saw as “practical” instead of those pesky court precedents based upon the issues of citizenship and foreign territory … and the Constitution … the majority reached the conclusion they wanted to, since what is practical is subjective. One can only ponder the state of our nation directed by the subjective instead of the Constitution.

As Chief Justice Roberts pointed out in his dissent, the court strikes down as inadequate the most generous set of protections ever afforded aliens detained by this country as enemy combatants.

Among the problems the majority saw was the prisoner’s limited access to classified information, even though his personal representative is allowed access to it and can summarize it for the accused. Exactly what procedures would pass muster with the majority? Well, this has to be figured out by the habeas court later – and most certainly be challenged in endless rounds of further litigation.

At this stage, no one can really tell the extent to which this decision is going to add to judicial confusion, additional administrative difficulty, time and attention of military personnel or how many more prisoners will be mistakenly released to join the at least 30 who were released from Guantanamo only to return to fight the United States.

In reading the majority opinion I am struck by the utter waste that is involved here. No, not the waste of military resources and human life, although such a result is tragically obvious. I refer to the waste of all those years these justices spent in law school studying how adherence to legal precedent is the bedrock of the rule of law, when it turns out, all they really needed was a Pew poll, a subscription to the New York Times, and the latest edition of “How to Make War for Dummies.”

It is truly stunning that this court has seen fit to arrogate unto itself a role in the most important issue facing any country, self-defense, in a case in which Congress has in fact repeatedly acted. This was not a case where Congress did not set the rules; it did. But the court still decided – in the face of overwhelming precedent to the contrary – to intervene. This decision, or course, will allow for "President Bush Is Rebuffed” headlines, the implication being that the Administration was caught red-handed violating clearly established Constitutional rights when in fact the Administration, and the Congress for that matter, followed guidelines established by the Supreme Court itself in prior cases.

People can disagree over whether Congress got it right, but at least members have to face the voters. What remedy do people have now if they don’t like the court’s decision? None. If that thought is not enough to cause concerned citizens to turn out on Election Day to elect a new president, then I don’t know what will be.

I also find it just a tad ironic that in a case involving habeas corpus, which literally means that one must produce a body (or person) before a court to explain the basis on which that person is being detained, the decision of this court may mean more fallen bodies in the defense of a Constitution some of these justices ignored.



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