Friday, March 11, 2016


WHAT THE SUPREME COURT SHOULD DO

It should stop Trump from running for office. Hs aim is obviously to destroy every other candidate, even the good Dr. Ben Carson. Trump would not hesitate to criticize candidates or the wives of candidates, ignoring the faults of his own, while the versatile Mrs. Ben Carson would adorn the White House with her many talents. I pray the good Lord will intervene in this election mess and put a good man or good woman on the American “throne.”

Wednesday, March 2, 2016


LOSS OF A GOOD PRESIDENT

 Why do so many Americans vote for a famous liar, a Socialist, or the most arrogant man alive at the cost of losing the only real Statesman in the line-up of candidates? I am white, but from the first debate, black Ben Carson has been my choice for president. I appreciate good humor and his first statement was loaded with humor while telling the truth. Remember? When the other candidates told what they had done and could do as president, he said he could separate Siamese twins. My guess is that in his area of expertise, neurosurgery, one cannot go any higher than separating Siamese twins.   

 Dr. Ben Carson has been special to me for another reason. He was head of his department at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, where I spent some time when our youngest child was terminally ill with leukemia. I visited the medical library there and saw whole walls with huge pictures of the founders painted there. That library was a wonderful and quiet place to be. I imagine Ben Carson also found it so.

In politics, he is also tops. I read his book A More Perfect Union which masterpiece no other candidate could have written easily. If an elected official believes what Ben Carson wrote in that book, we would have a more nearly perfect union. But our current presidential candidates apparently are working for their own careers, while Carson has worked for our country and its future. Whoever gets elected, he needs to add Dr. Ben Carson to his cabinet.

Thursday, February 18, 2016


POPE FRANCIS AND I

 Today the news broke that the Pope had called Donald Trump “not Christian.” Many will agree with him but perhaps for different reasons. The average voter does not know much about the ramifications concerning immigration. Trump has replied the Pope’s comment is “disgraceful.” But there is one Truth from the Bible that says, “Pride goeth before a fall.” I wonder if Trump knows that.

Monday, February 8, 2016


TO EDUCATE OR NOT TO EDUCATE

 I have mentioned here a scarcity of comments concerning education when the current presidential election takes place. Yesterday I heard it clear and repeatedly one candidate said that he wanted government (D. C.) completely out of education! He wants parents to make the rules. Hurrah for Kasich! I liked him already and now he has put the icing on the cake. Also Jeb Bush looks better and better, as some are fading away.

 Nevertheless, my first choice is still Ben Carson. He probably knows more about education than all the rest of the roster put together. Let’s give Ben Carson the chance to show us, and, if needed, he has that lovely and capable wife to advise him.  
SO MANY SUICIDES

Currently it seems the popular thing to do to commit suicide. One wonders if these victims know where they are going. It’s like jumping from the frying pan into the fire. Perhaps they think of themselves as heroes and that the fire won’t last long. How misguided they are! You can find the rules for living and for dying explained in a book called the Holy Bible. If you have a problem with reading, find a Christian minister to explain it to you. Ask several Christian ministers, for today charlatans abound, sometimes even in the pulpit. Remember, your “best friend” will not be waiting for you after taking your own life. We all are born alone and we die alone. It’s better to stay alive till God decides our time is up. Don’t be a part of a foolish, fatal fad.

Wednesday, February 3, 2016


THINK AGAIN

Do you really think you could endure daily that bird-like mouth, those fidgeting hands, those knock-knees, and those baggy pants?

Monday, February 1, 2016


LEST WE FORGET

 

Recently a photograph on AOL reminded me of Anne Frank and for good reason: it was of her stepsister. You might have never known Anne had a stepsister, but remember, Anne’s father survived the war and the Nazi prison camp, while he lost his wife and two daughters. Perhaps he began a new family. If you have never read Anne Frank’s diary covering the time she and her family hid away from Hitler and his minions (in Amsterdam) for about two years, you should read it. If you don’t read, the excellent movie version would be worth your while. On AOL the stepsister is quoted as saying one of our current presidential candidates is much like Hitler.

 

Hitler was in my generation and there are not many of us left. The younger generations have no idea how evil that man was. However, another film of a true story I recommend about that time and that evil man is “The Hiding Place,” the story of a Dutch watchmaker, Corrie ten Boon, whose family hid Jews in their home, and got caught. Corrie went to a Nazi prison camp, survived that with an occasional miracle, and was finally set free to tell the world her story. This film, with professional actors, was produced by the Billy Graham Association. Not for little children.

 

These two stories, The Diary of Anne Frank and “The Hiding Place,” both of them in book and movie format, should make you never want to vote for any candidate who reminds Anne’s stepsister of Hitler.

Tuesday, January 26, 2016


ONCE MORE: I PREDICT

 Most of my readers have not heard this prediction till now; so if you can guess what I am about to repeat, read on; there may be something new.

 It’s about the “killing books” by Bill O’Reilly and Martin Dugard. They have told the killing stories of Lincoln, Kennedy, Jesus, Patton, Hitler, and Reagan. When I was reading Killing Reagan, I came across the name of a famous person who died, and I thought that would be another one for O’Reilly and Dugard to write about the death of. (You, too, can end a sentence with a preposition, Churchill agreed.)  Then I waited for some announcement of the next best seller from these two. It came quite a while ago but it said only that the book was in progress. But when O’Reilly told us this, he had a telling grin on his face that would be there only if the book was about an attractive female who was killed. As soon as I saw that grin, I felt a certainty that this book’s main character is the person whose name I noticed in the Reagan book. I will reveal that in a moment.

Currently O’Reilly is in California, where Dugard lives, and while doing his “Factor” supervising from that location, he must be there working on that book. It will be out soon, I think, and it may become the biggest best seller of the killing books. I must add I have read several books about tthis female and one that convinced me she was murdered and by whom, one I will not reveal to you. You will just have to read the book. I think its title will be Killing Marilyn.

Monday, January 25, 2016


TO DO OR TO BE

 During this election season, there has been little talk about education, perhaps our country’s most challenging and most enduring problem. If education is mentioned, it seems to float around in terms of how many millions or billions and not get at the heart of the matter. Voters need to know exactly what that money is spent for. Such costs as school busses and hot lunches we take for granted, but what exactly do the teachers offer?

 When I learn that a young person wants to prepare to be a teacher, I want to shake his shoulders and scream at him to study the liberal arts first. Today we have two kinds of degrees, one that teaches you how to do something and one that teaches you how to live. Perhaps you can earn a degree in basket weaving and you may earn a satisfactory salary. (I really mean wages.) But such a degree does not teach you how to live. It takes the liberal arts for that. And what are they?  

 The liberal arts are (in alphabetical order) architecture, art, ballet, drama, language (foreign and your own), history, literature, music, philosophy and religion. It isn’t that you learn how to design a cathedral, or to preach sermons, or write the great American novel, but you learn about them, appreciate them, support them, discuss them and they enrich your life. When you are teaching third graders you might tell them the story of Narcissus from Greek mythology, who fell in love with his own reflection in the water (as a matter of fact, just yesterday I heard the word “narcissist” as a description of one of the presidential candidates. How nice to know what the speaker meant.) Then there is Procrustees from mythology who cut off the legs of visitors whose legs were too long for his beds. Of course, I do not mean the third graders should necessarily hear the entire myth with possibly gory details, but just the heart of the story.

 When I was in the lower grades in Tennessee, the superintendent of schools, Mr. James, paid us the occasional visit when all six grades gathered to hear the story he told us. He had a great gift of telling stories and I remember hearing Hawthorne’s “The Great Stone Face” without any horror in it. He was there on business, I suppose, but he took time to tell us a wonderful story every time he visited us. He had a business job to do, but he knew something of the Arts too. He was showing us how to live.

 I once knew a high school drill instructor who bragged that she had not read a book since she was in school, whatever level she meant. When I quizzed her about the literature we all studied in high school at the time, she could not identify any Dickens character, or name a Shakespeare comedy. How could anyone forget Madame Defarge? Or Silas Marner? Or Elizabeth Bennet? Or Heathcilff? Or Lady Macbeth? Or Hamlet? And if you know these characters they must have taught you something to live by. This may be different with each person. But it certainly does depend on the quality of the teacher. I knew a teacher who started a phonograph record to play Julius Caesar and left the room for the duration. You don’t leave a class of tenth-graders alone with Shakespeare! You teach Shakespeare and don’t depend upon an unsupervised recording to do that for you. You stand there and stop the machine to explain what the bard meant.

 But literature is only one of the liberal arts. I have a special affinity for it, of course, but I know something about all the fields of liberal arts. It's almost safe to say that all the subjects of the arts are related to each other, but it might be difficult to convince someone of the kinship between architecture and ballet, but  if one studies the two fields deeply enough, the relationship will probably turn up.

 Before any young person enters the study program in Education (to become a teacher), I suggest he spend at least two years in the study of the Liberal Arts. It can make all the difference. You will enjoy life more and learn how to live it.

Monday, January 4, 2016


A SLOW START FOR 2016

Here it is the third day of the new year and I still cannot work my computer. But tomorrow I expect to talk with my tech and learn a bit more. Windows 7 is so much more complicated than the old machine, an XP I think it was called. And I hear Windows 10 is much worse than the 7. There is no good reason for hiding a PRINT button, but that is what this one does. You might think, with all this time away from printing something for some purpose, I must be reading War and Peace. Yes, I have turned the page once! I haven’t reached page 400 yet. New deadline: the end of June!

 Now it is the fourth day of 2016 and I’ve talked with the tech and have added one more Blog. But Pete (my computer) would not print the whole blog in one size font! That is crazy. Right in the middle of my trying to get it spaced just right, comes a big ad for Windows 10. I think I’ll look into SCREEN MAGIC and see what that company offers.

 On another plane, thousands of Americans watched “Downton Abbey” last night, beginning its sixth and last season. At MorningStar was a morning tea called “Downtown Abbey Tea” in the printed day’s bulletin. I stopped by the front desk to see if there were any leftover daily bulletins. I found two and proceeded to scratch out the second “W” in the Abbey’s name. I said to the new girl on the desk, “Can you imagine an abbey’s being downtown?” She said, “That’s for today.” I said, “I know that. This correction isn’t for us residents. It’s for you girls who work this desk and print the bulletins.” She likely thought I did not know what I was talking about. But I hope she learned I was right.  
FRANKLIN GRAHAM, A FAVORITE OF MINE

If you watch Greta Van Susteren’s program every day, you will know the name Franklin Graham. He recently showed some of the shoeboxes his company, Samaritan’s Purse, gives at Christmas–boxes filled with goodies and toys--to thousands of children who would not have any Christmas otherwise. The money for these boxes comes from people all over America and perhaps other places, and total in the millions of boxes by this time. Of course, the boxes also contain Scriptures from the Bible.

 But on a recent show of Greta’s, Graham, who happens to be a son of Dr. Billy Graham, stated in essence that what this country needs particularly this Christmas, is a national call to prayer for our country. We have never experienced a political election as the present one that is full of turmoil. He is right, of course, and deserves the Nobel Prize for Peace. But the Norwegian Nobel Committee does not usually award the prize to such a Christian as Graham. That is a sad outlook on life.