HappyHahnjeah jeah..
happyhahn809
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Country: United States
State: California
Gender: Male


Interests: God, people who do what they say, honesty/vulnerable people, golf, snowboarding, skiing, eating chicken burritos w/ black beans, licking Mango Sorbet off of a big spoon, , U.S. Academy graduates, fellow Fulbrighters, changing the world, talking about why top-down reformation is also necessary..
Expertise: i'm just ok at almost everything.. i work in software, but know nothing about computers.. preparing myself in every way so that He can put me into "the game"..
Occupation: Other
Industry: Other


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Member Since: 3/26/2006

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Tuesday, October 16, 2007

Currently Listening
Still Feels Good
By Rascal Flatts
see related

Jesus is good, All the time. All the time, Jesus is good.

Since I last updated, I left my work in San Fran and moved back home.  After a few weeks of hanging out, I started the 40-day JAMA GLDI journey with its inaugural class of about 90 others in sunny Costa Mesa, CA.  I can't explain all that I learned/realized under the instruction of the top Christian philosophers, professors, pastors, and professionals.  But if you're curious, just ask.  Also, I hope that all of you will look into being a part of this program and its powerful network.

For those that don't know, I moved to New York and now work for Louis Dreyfus Corp.  Come visit.



Tuesday, April 17, 2007

Judge by Character and not the Color of my Skin

 

Hey World,

 

Wake up.  Do NOT judge the character of over 2 million Korean-Americans by the insanity of one troubled boy.

 

I’m embarrassed and disheartened to hear that the boy behind the gun was a Korean-American.  No matter how the media portrays Cho Seung-Hui, he is a fellow Korean-American.  It’s unfortunate and it is true. 

 

I’m saddened and disappointed to hear the media’s portrayal of the Korean ethnicity.  I know that generations have toiled to create such organizations as the Korean American Coalition; Korean American Community Foundation; Korean American Family Service Center; Korean American Museum; Korean American Professionals Society; Korean Churches for Community Development; Korean Health Education, Information & Research Center; Koreatown Youth & Community Center; the National Korean American Service & Education Consortium, Inc.; and the list goes on and on.  Their focused contributions have assisted in recognizing January 13th as Korean American Day.

 

My very own immigrant parents improved the American medical society with their professionalism and innovation in surgical equipment.  But in today’s speedy world of automatic everythings, it’s the people and the relationships that take the fall.  My parents aren’t the focus of intellectual talks or magnificent speeches, but instead the scraps of Russell Peter’s jokes.  It sucks and I’m the first to admit that we have a problem.  It’s rare to see us sit and chat without selfish intentions and I admit that this takes patience, but fast assumptions are the stranglers of our society’s oxygen.

 

I know that my parents hoped to raise their three boys to be humble young men.  I comprehend that they shared the same dream of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. when he said, “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character.”  America, wake up.  The aftermath of the Virginia Tech massacre should be focused on mourning not rage.  Please join me in living each day judging man, woman, or child by the content of their character and not the color of their skin.

 

My prayers and condolences are with the families and friends of everyone involved in the horrific Virginia Tech massacre and I can’t fathom how desperately Cho Seung-Hui’s family members desire for you to be attentive to their individual characters.

 

Respectfully,

 

John


Friday, April 06, 2007

Commentary: What would Jesus really do?

POSTED: 11:13 a.m. EDT, April 6, 2007
By Roland Martin
CNN Contributor
Editor's note: Roland Martin is a CNN contributor and talk-show host on WVON-AM in Chicago, Illinois. He is the author of "Listening to the Spirit Within: 50 Perspectives on Faith."

NEW YORK (CNN) -- When did it come to the point that being a Christian meant only caring about two issues,­ abortion and homosexuality?

Ask the nonreligious what being a Christian today means, and based on what we see and read, it's a good bet they will say that followers of Jesus Christ are preoccupied with those two points.

Poverty? Whatever. Homelessness? An afterthought. A widening gap between the have and have-nots? Immaterial. Divorce? The divorce rate of Christians mirrors the national average, so that's no big deal.

The point is that being a Christian should be about more than abortion and homosexuality, and it's high time that those not considered a part of the religious right expose the hypocrisy of our brothers and sisters in Christianity and take back the faith. And those on the left who believe they have a "get out of sin free" card must not be allowed to justify their actions.

Many people believe we are engaged in a holy war. And we are. But it's not with Muslims. The real war -- ­ the silent war ­-- is being engaged among Christians, and that's what we must set our sights on.

As we celebrate Holy Week, our focus is on the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. But aren't we also to recommit ourselves to live more like Jesus? Did Jesus spend his time focusing on all that he didn't like, or did Jesus raise the consciousness of the people to understand love, compassion and teach them about following the will of God?

As a layman studying to receive a master's in Christian communications, and the husband of an ordained minister, it's troubling to listen to "Christian radio" and hear the kind of hate spewing out of the mouths of my brothers and sisters in the faith.

In fact, I've grown tired of people who pimp God. That's right; we have a litany of individuals today who are holy, holy, holy, sing hallelujah, talk about how they love the Lord, but when it's time to walk the walk, somehow the spirit evaporates.

A couple of years ago I took exception to an e-mail blast from the Concerned Women for America. The group was angry that Democrats were blocking certain judges put up for the federal bench by President Bush. It called on Americans to fight Democrats who wanted to keep Christians off the bench.

So I called and sent an e-mail asking, "So, where were you when President Clinton appointed Christian judges to the bench? Were they truly behind Christian judges, or Republican Christian judges?

Surprise, surprise. There was never a response.

An African-American pastor I know in the Midwest was asked by a group of mostly white clergy to march in an anti-abortion rally. He was fine with that, but then asked the clergy if they would work with him to fight crack houses in predominantly black neighborhoods.

"That's really your problem," he was told.

They saw abortion as a moral imperative, but not a community ravaged by crack.

If abortion and gay marriage are part of the Christian agenda, I have no issue with that. Those are moral issues that should be of importance to people of the faith, but the agenda should be much, much broader.

I'm looking for the day when Jerry Falwell, Pat Robertson, Joyce Meyer, James Dobson, Tony Perkins, James Kennedy, Rod Parsley, " Patriot Pastors" and Rick Warren will sit at the same table as Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, Cynthia Hale, Eddie L. Long, James Meek, Fred Price, Emmanuel Cleaver and Floyd Flake to establish a call to arms on racism, AIDS, police brutality, a national health care policy, our sorry education system.

If they all say they love and worship one God, one Jesus, let's see them rally their members behind one agenda.

I stand here today not as a Republican or a liberal. And don't bother calling me a Democrat or a conservative. I am a man,­ an African-American man ­who has professed that Jesus Christ is Lord, and that's to whom I bow down.

If you concur, it's time to stop allowing a chosen few to speak for the masses. Quit letting them define the agenda.

So put on the full armor of God because we have work to do.


Monday, March 26, 2007

Hey Mom,.. I'm a Baby Model. Plus, tribute to Abe Choi and the people who "booked" with the bags

  My dad loves his new scanner and includes these in his short/sweet emails.

Me, Michael on Dad's head, Danny. Pictures like this make me think twice about wanting a lot of kids.  What would have been left of my parents had they continued to have more kids every 18 months?

Ever wonder how OshKosh B'Gosh became so big?  I was a baby model.. I think.

Also, my friend Abe is in S. Africa doing business and recently climbed Kil·i·man·ja·ro  (kĭl'ə-mən-jär'ō).
The highest mountain in Africa, in northeast Tanzania near the Kenya border, rising in two snow-capped peaks to 5,898.7 m (19,340 ft). The higher of the two peaks was first climbed in 1889.

Ladies, he's single, a business genius, and a whole lot of fun if you're down with dirt bikes, mountain climbing, and all of that "uniqueness" that comes along with a korean guy from Louisiana/Georgia.

"There were 42 staff, a small army, for the 9 hikers.  Most of the porters signed up on the day for the hike.  All the porters have about 15 kilos of equipment that they have to move.  We even had one female porter.  The hikers would take off in the morning while the porters packed up the camp and then the most amazing thing is they would run with it to get to the next camp to set up before we got there.  Within an hour, the last porters would have passed us and they did this for less than 2 dollars a day, everyday.  Seeing guys carry huge packs on their backs or their heads and literally running while we were trying to get acclimatized (to the elevation) was incomprehensible.  It didn't matter if it was 3500 meters or 4800 meters (elevation), they were booking it." - email from Abe

 

 

What the heck am I doing?  working a little and playing a lot..


Friday, March 09, 2007

Pshhh.. that ain't silver, that's platinum baby

I think the last 3 weekends of snowboarding caught up with me.  I didn't feel well this week and when my mom called at 6pm, I was already back from work and laying in bed.  The next morning, I got this email from my dad.

"keep on smiling,

i hope you feel better.
you need rest !!!

have a good day."

And with the short and sweet message above, he sent me these:

 

 

I know that I haven't told many of you, but I did start the whole "grillz a.k.a. metal in yo mouth" trend.  I can't help it, when all these rappers started calling my house in preschool, I showed them some pics and proclaimed, "I set trends."

Michael, Danny and Me ... hahaha.. Michael looks like a Gremlin.

FYI, my parents are the bestest.



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