About Me

Name: Brad Yeager
Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Blog Roll

 

Pandora's Box

Unless you have been under a rock for the last month, you have probably heard that California has taken another leap towards the abyss. The ultra-intellectual, social-engineering judges of the Left Coast paved the way for homosexual “marriage” over the wishes and good judgment of the Californian common people. Liberals everywhere are rejoicing, and the mainstream media have crowned the action a civil rights victory for the ages. Blinded by feelings and fueled by emotions, these shortsighted elitists have thrown themselves headlong into the path of an oncoming freight train. 
 
To read more, go to www.rightersblock.com.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Sexually Revolting

“The feminist movement has inspired among us a new openness about women’s and men’s sexuality and has helped free women’s sexual behavior from its traditional constraints.”
Carrie L. Lukas, from the article “Sex (Ms.) Education” circa 2005

Carrie Lukas – or “Care Bear,” as I like to call her - communicates the typical feminist and modern sex educator viewpoint.  She is one of the many women espousing the belief that liberation is found in random, recreational (but somehow responsible) sex.  Thanks to birth control, you women can act like men and satisfy your carnal hungers at will.  Don’t worry about waiting and romance.  If a guy doesn’t come along on his own, you are “free” to be the aggressor.  You can shack up whenever, with whomever, and wherever you want for not even so much as the cost of a McDonald’s Big Mac.  You have the power, hear you roar!  The funny thing is that – if you think this way – you are one of the many women who has been absolutely and totally conned.

To read more, go to www.rightersblock.com.

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

The Tyranny of Can't (Part 1)

Before finally getting published, he was rejected by 123 publishers. In the first two days of pitching the book, his coauthor and he were shot down about a dozen times because “the title was stupid,” “nobody buys collections of short stories,” and because the book contained “no edge.”

The author was Jack Canfield (with Mark Victor Hansen), and the book was Chicken Soup for the Soul. The tome has spawned a book series, and now there are over 80 million copies in print.

Another individual was abandoned by his wife who had deemed him a failure. In the course of pursuing his dream, he found himself homeless and raising his toddler son alone. His dream began with an unpaid internship position with a brokerage firm in a high-cost West Coast city.

The man is Christopher Gardner, and he went on to become CEO of his own stock brokerage firm, Gardner Rich and Co. Mr. Gardner has amassed a net worth of roughly $65 million, and his published memoirs went on to become the basis of a little movie called The Pursuit of Happyness.

Another individual founded a computer company in the late ‘70s that helped bring personal computing into the mainstream. By 1985, in the midst of a company slump, he was forced out of the multi-million dollar organization he had helped create.

The man is Steve Jobs, founder and current CEO of Apple, Inc. After his forced resignation, he founded NeXT, a computer platform later bought out by Apple in 1997 for several hundreds of millions of dollars, and acquired Pixar Animation from LucasFilms Ltd, which has brought us such great films as Toy Story and Monsters Inc. He has since gone on as Apple’s CEO to revolutionize how we listen to music (with the iPod) and how music is distributed (see iTunes.com). 

What do these individuals have in common? Luck? Nope. Timing? Well, sure. They also deliver intelligence, vision, and passion. While these are all great and admirable traits, the key thing they have that separates them from 95% of the rest of us is the ability to move beyond the “can’t.” The “can’t” is the chorus of voices – internal, external, and situational - that speak in opposition to our pursuits, dreams, and daily assignments. The “can’t” is our invisible prison, the difference between living life and feeling alive.
 
To read more, go to www.rightersblock.com.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Compartmentalizing Christ (Part 1)

 
            “I can’t take my Catholic belief, my article of faith, and legislate it on a Protestant or a Jew or an atheist.” John Kerry, July 2004

 
            “Religion has been a huge part of my life, helped lead me through a war, leads me today. But I can’t take what is an article of faith for me and legislate it for someone who doesn’t share that article of faith, whether they be agnostic, atheist, Jew, Protestant, whatever. I can’t do that. But I can counsel people. . .” John Kerry, October 2004

 
            “I don’t think I have the right to impose my view – on something I accept as a matter of faith – on the rest of society.” Joseph Biden, 2007
 
            “Democracy demands that the religiously motivated translate their concerns into universal, rather than religion-specific, values. It requires that their proposals be subject to argument, and amenable to reason. . . Politics depends on our ability to persuade each other of common aims based on a common reality. It involves a compromise. . . At some fundamental level, religion does not allow for compromise. . . To base one’s life on such uncompromising commitments may be sublime, but to base our policy on such commitments would be a dangerous thing.” Barack Obama, June 2006 “Call to Renewal” Keynote Address

 
What strikes you about those statements? What is the common theme? Apparently, there is no place for religion or religious faith in politics. Beyond that, one’s faith is evidently separate from who one is. It is something that we can set aside. We can box it up and shelve it should we so choose. Righteously we can take the box out again and adorn ourselves properly on the appropriate holy days – perhaps even for five minutes before bedtime when we pray or for the 15 minutes in the morning when we read the Good Book. It is either that, or the “faith” is much more a facade than anything else.
 
To read more, go to www.rightersblock.com.
Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1Next »