2013년 12월 31일 화요일

White House Uses Taxpayer Funds to Promote Goldman Sachs While Massively Expanding the Welfare State


White House Uses Taxpayer Funds to Promote Goldman Sachs While Massively Expanding the Welfare State


FOOD STAMP EXPLOSION: The White House is now using taxpayer funds to promote economic illiteracy like this, which it shares with Common Core. The term SNAP refers to food stamps:



Now let's think this through.

1. The government takes $10 from you, which prevents you from spending it on something you want...

2. The government launders that $10 through the federal bureaucracy, which leaves roughly $5 for benefits...

3. The government takes the remaining $5 it hasn't wasted and sends it to those who may or may not need it...

Hold up. My first point is wrong. The government doesn't take $10 from you... it takes $6 from you and borrows the rest by issuing debt.



And that borrowing program is executed by a certain number of "Primary Dealers" -- enormous, powerful banks like Goldman Sachs -- that make billions managing the sale of U.S. debt.

Furthermore, the fraud endemic in the food stamp program is legendary. Billions upon billions of your money is stolen each year, much of it in plain view on sites like Craig's List.

Therefore, in order to believe the collectivist propagandists in the Obama White House, you'd have to ignore all of the fraud, ignore Goldman Sachs, ignore the borrowing, ignore all of the money laundered through the federal bureaucracy, ignore the money confiscated from you... and pretend all of that is more efficient than you spending your money freely on things that you need or want.

You'd have to be completely mad or completely ignorant to believe that -- and it would seem the White House thinks you're either one or the other.


Hat tip: G-Man.



The Law Kills ... So Let's Insert An Easier One.


The Law Kills ... So Let's Insert An Easier One.


Bad Theology rears its ugly head again.

Have you ever heard a well-meaning brother or sister in Christ share a story that goes something like this?

I thought I was a Christian. I went to church every Sunday because that's what Christians do. And I thought Iwas a pretty good person. But I eventually realized that nothing I did could ever save me. I was not a good person and I was lost. I was not saved just by going to church.

Sound familiar so far? So far, it's not so bad. The person has realized that they cannot do anything to save themselves and the perfect demands of God's Holy Law has crushed them. They then continue with something like...

I was not saved just by going to church. I would stay out all night doing x, y, and z. Then I would get up and go to church in the morning. I realized my lost state and then really, truly, gave my life to Jesus. I made it a personal relationship. I could not do anything to earn my salvation, but I made sure I was really, truly, saved. I accepted Christ as my personal Lord and Savior.

And here is where the train goes off the rails. The first part sounds so good! The Law did it's job! It crushed the person and drove them to Christ. Score one for the Law.

But then...but then...but then. It's supposed to read: "But God, being rich in mercy, because of the great love with which he loved us, even when we were dead in our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ—by grace you have been saved" (Eph 2:4-5)

But it doesn't. It reads: I gave my life to Christ and made Him my personal Lord and Savior. I gave up those things I used to stay up all night doing; x, y, and z. All of them. I'm not perfect, but I love Jesus. This of course is accompanied by heavy emotion, choked back tears, and such.

So here is the rub. The person ultimately is rooting their salvation in doing something. Whether that be "making Christ Lord and Savior" or "surrendering" or "accepting Christ," they're rooting their salvation in...voila, an easier version of the law. This is all purely subjective. How can this not lead to a lack of assurance of salvation? I gave up x, y, and z. Well, what if you do x, y, and z again? or even just one of them? Well, there goes your assurance and now you're back at square one.

The other thing is that this just is not at all what Scripture tells us about salvation. Scripture tells us that Christ saves us. Alone. By Himself. It's like, all 100% Him. There is no "I'm saved because I gave my life to Christ." That's not in Scripture. There is also no "I made Jesus my personal Lord and Savior." That's not in Scripture either. There is really no "I'm a Christian and know I am really, truly, personally saved because I gave up all these things." That kind of sounds like you're boasting in leaving behind things. Know what I mean?

The other thing that is bothersome about testimonies like this is that they downplay the role of the Church. Big time. They always pit "personal relationship" vs. "church." You hear phrases like "going to church doesn't make you a Christian," and things like that.

Well, the Church is precisely the place that delivers Christ to you: personally and objectively. Not by your willing it, not by you making Christ Lord, and not by your giving up things. Those are all subjective, and those are all works!

Instead, the Church gives you Christ the way Christ said He is to be given. Christ gave us officers in the Church to deliver His good gifts to us. We call this the office of the ministry. Your pastor preaches Christ crucified to you. He is present in His Word. Your pastor baptises you in the Name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. In that you are united to Christ. Your pastor administers the blessed Sacrament of Christ's body and blood, which is for the forgiveness of sins.

When, oh when, did we start replacing the Law with an easier law of "accepting Christ," "making Christ Lord and Savior," and giving things up? That's how we know we're really saved people will say.I say nonsense. We know we are really saved because Christ strengthens our faith weekly by giving us Himself in Word and Sacrament. We ARE baptised. He has claimed us. We are His.Get rid of Pietism. It's a dead end and it's terrible theology. And stop chucking the Church under the bus. The Church gives you God's good gifts. If God is your Father, the Church is your Mother.

Pax


Resources for your very own Pilling Report Party


Resources for your very own Pilling Report Party



This week brought a public meeting with mlearned friend Malcolm Duncan from Gold Hill Baptist Church for a public conversation with 280 people listening in. I welcome same-sex marriage in a way he can't, but we both enjoyed talking and agreed it was a helpful thing to do. We hoped that people might value listening in to a conversation that didn't pretend, piddle about or otherwise minimise the sharpness of our differences, but which also, people told us, conveyed our respect for each other as fellow ministers, with the Kingdom high on our hearts.Then, out of the blue, came the Pilling Report — a discussion document. Recent speculative flurries about what might be in it shows how profoundly wise it was simply to publish it. That way everyone, including the bishops, can have better information to go on when they discuss it.I have been asked by various people, however, for some resources to inform, enrich and enlarge intelligent conversations on this subject. Such conversations carry their own risks. It can exacerbate the problem when straight twosomes talk, even well-meaningly,aboutgay people rather thanwiththem. I also realise how weird it seems to the majority of people younger than me who have sorted this subject and moved on that we are still talking about it at all. They feel as though they had strayed into a Saudi discussion of whether women should be allowed to drive.That said, I am trying to help us do what Pilling bids us do. With my two health warnings, out of several thousand possibilities, I commend a few books that provide intelligent ways into various aspects of the matter — I don't agree 100% with all or any of them, but they have worthwhile information about different dimensions of discussions based...Science






Law



Bible

Theology

DenominationalStories



Dialoguing in Church ...







MPR Decoder Transportation Funding Forum


MPR Decoder Transportation Funding Forum



MPR recently aired a forum they taped of the state's most highfalutin' powers-that-be when it comes to transportation funding. It included Met Council chair Sue Haigh (SH), former Met Council chair (and token Republican) Peter Bell (PB), MNDOT head Charles Zelle (CZ), and it was moderated by the ubiquitous Larry Jacobs (LJ).

Because all of these people are importnat, and because you can start to get a sense of thier priorities by listening to them talk about the future of Minnesota transportation, I typed out a rough transcript of the conversation for your edification.

Here's the interview, with a few comments. Listen for yourself here.


MPR Host: One of the biggest issues we face is transportation. How can people get where they need to go? How do we pay for roads and bridges? [introduces guests]
SH: Im excited that more people are understanding transit is critical to economic growth as a region. Its about how we operate and build out a system for the future. Were focused on operations and smart efficient operations, but also how we make that investment for the next 30 40 50 70 years. Its that dichotomy between investing in the day to day and in building out that system for the future. [talks about governor Daytons blue ribbon transportation committee that pretty much failed because the state DFL powers didnt actually follow through on their good ideas]. The findings are really important. Regions with robust transit systems work better and are the choice destinations for employers and employees. Uncertainty about investment is what keeps the market from investing in economic growth and prosperity. We must remain competitive. ["Competitive" is everyone's favorite word.]

Our metro region is the 13th largest metro economy in the US. How the region goes is how the state goes. [I.e. rural legislators, chill out.] Making investments in the region is good for the whole state. Transportation and transit cant be separated. Buses run on roads. The most important investments for roads are the HOV lanes, MNPASS lanes. So we work very closely with MNDOT all the time in planning our future. When I think about transit and we think about where we wanna go were making decisions today for the rest of the century. Must be courageous and bold. Where is growth going to be? In the next 30 years, were gonna have 800K more people in the region. [So they say.] We have to plan for it, it's changing dramatically.

There will be 2X more seniors, and far more diverse. 43% of the people who live in the region will be people of color. 2/3 of the new households wont have kids under 18. This is beginning to drive demand in the marketplace for housing changes. [Absolutely, long overdue too.] Our ability to grow as a region is so critical to the success of our state. We hear from employers that increasingly people are making a choice about where to live, [as opposed to what? I am still skeptical that people move around the country based on culture as Richard Florida would have us believe] and thats where theyll go work (v. the other way around). This is a fundamental millenial shift. We know that millenials are not in love with the car. Like with my parents or my generation growing up, getting a drivers license at 16 was a big deal. Now, not so much. Theres a decrease in the percentage of millenails who have a drivers license today, only 80%. And thats because its great to be on transit. You are gonna be logged on, linked in, extending your social day and your business day. We have to be smart about that today as we plan for the future.

What happens if we do nothing? Well barely be able to maintain what we have today. The task we have in front of us is, how do we pay for this? [With money, borrowed.]

The governor last session said the smart way to pay for this we currently have a quarter cent sales tax in the region, and the Governor proposed expanding to a seven county half cent sales tax. This is what our competitor regions do. Theyre going to the sales tax. We are very far behind where that investment is compared to our competitor regions. [Competition!]

The Itasca project, a CEO-led business alliance, thinks transportation is very important. They did an ROI, and said theres actually a 6-10B return by the year 2040 as we build out this transit system. We would be making a 4.4B investment to build out the transitways. [I like the way people talk about the Itasca project as if it was a either an Illuminati-style secret society or the Manhattan project, also a secret society.]

The study looked at hard data about vehicle operation costs, travel time, logistics, emissions, safety, road maintenance. And they looked at the indirect savings too, not in that 6-10B number. If we invest in this, we will provide more access to more jobs. So we need to keep up with our regional competitors. Denver, Phoenix, Dallas, Houston, Seattle. [Must we compete with Phoenix?] What it means to be able to be attractive to the next generation of works, transit is a really important part of that equation.

I just visited Phoenix, Seattle, and Denver. It's really interesting what theyve done in Denver. 10 years ago they didnt have transit. In the last 5-10 years, theyre on track to build out 5 major transitway investments. In the TC we have the blue line, and by the middle of next year well have the green line. Well have 2 and thats great, but if we compare where we are with Denver, we wanna be that region too. Part of that investment is thinking about how we compete against other regions.

The critical point to consider is that when people get on a bus or train, theyre going to work or school. 80%. So the idea of investing in transit is really investing in that economic growth and prosperity. Since 2003 when the Blue Line opened, we have had 15,000 housing units built along that line. The Green Line isnt opening until next year, but weve had $1.7B in permits pulled for housing units along the central corridor. When the market knows where the investment is going to be, the market is attracted to come there for economic growth. We need to create a revenue stream that supports the system to be attractive for growth and prosperity. 40000 riders are going to ride the green line next year, really important to the U of MN. We know the data shows us, and we have to marshal the political courage to move forward to make this investment. I look forward to working with Commissioner Zelle to work together on transit and roads. [Or, in MNDOT's case, almost all roads.]

PB: Transportation is one of the very few spaces in our political discourse where there is a shot of coming to common ground. Everyone agrees we need government to do transportation. [Actually, I'd bet there are some wackos who would disagree...]

Said that, I have some concerns. One is that for transit only 5% of the public uses transit. [If that.] There are no estimates that I see... 7 or 8% would be wildly optimistic. In terms of it's impact to move the needle of congestion – which is the public's concern... they wanna go as cheaply and quickly as possible, and all the other things they could care less about, [I'm not quite willing to go that far, Peter. There are other things we care about, like what is our experience like. For example, do we have to sit on sharp spikes?] we should never take our eye off that dot. While Im a strong supporter of transportation, we cant delude ourselves that building more transit systems is gonna create a day-to-night solution. [I mean, he's right of course. Things don't change overnight. But this kind of attitude is frustrating. Haven't we built enough roads by now?]

Second point, from my POV about 20 years ago the Gov't stopped funding programs and started funding strategic investments. One of the things I learned as Met Council chair is that everybody, literally everybody, who goes to the legislature doesnt ask for people to spend money, but to make investments that will pay for themselves. I mean, everybody says that. higher education, affordable housing, chemical dependency, job trainings, WIC program, our national health insurance, sports stadiums, transportation and transit says that. Thats just the beginning of the list. It goes on forever. But the accumulative total of all those expenditures is a little bit of smoke and mirrors and hard to nail down. [Aw heck. I kinda like Peter Bell.]

Why is that the case?

Because of the intervening variables that impact that. What impacts job creation in the Twin Cities in my mind are interest rates, the education of the population, tax rates, the regulatory environment, crime, and foreign competition, to name a few. Those powerful intervening variables make it impossible to say if this transit line is building our economy by 1 percent. What the fed is going to do with interest rates overwhelms all of that. What china is doing with its currently overwhelms all of that… But when we try to quantify or oversell, we get into trouble, because the major problem in America today is cynicism. [Yeah, and whose fault is that?] I'm reminded by the Lily Tomlin line, "No matter how cynical I become, it's never enough to keep up." [A Lily Tomlin quote? Be still my beating heart!] The public feels that elected officials over promise and under produce, constantly.

Again Im on board with these investments, but to say theyre going to pay a return on investment is very difficult and somewhat squishy. [Yup. See today's Streets.mn post.]

More points on transit. The indispensable co-ingredient is density. You cant talk about transit unless you talk about density. The 40,000 people riding the Central Corridor [I like how he still calls it this, instead of the "green line" like Sue Haigh] every day have to live in close proximity to use that system. What did I learn at the Met Council? I learn people have very different and strong feelings about density. Thats a co-ingredient about transit. We have to continue to discuss our regional view, the plusses, some of the minuses that people dont like about density, and address those issues.

More points, modestly provocative. It was a mistake for the FTA to move away from the CEI to the more fluid CEI. The Feds now allow more subjectivity to come into the transit funding. That benefited us. We could build 3 infill stations on the central corridor. That was my mistake. [It's a rare quality to admit one's mistakes.] I didnt realize soon enough we should have built those 3 stations from the start. The community was right. We hid behind the CEI to do that. The difficulty of having a more flexible CEI is that the queue is going to grow very rapidly and very large, and I will take a bet on any amount that the available transit dollars wont grow as fast as the queue because of having a more flexible CEI. Many embrace it, including economic development or impact of housing, subjective things we cant quantify with precision. And others in the country will do the same thing and it wont be as good an expenditure of dollars as it was before.

Second point, we in the TC have to look hard and sober at the amount of community input we have, and whether it should be allowed to morph into a community veto. The SWLRT battles... While I supported the 3 infill stations and that came from community input, we did some things on the CCLRT especially with the U of MN that we didnt have to do. [Right on: see my old posts about it.] We spent more money because of the pressure they brought to bear. I suspect the same thing will happen with the SWLRT. Well spend more money than we need to because of community input. [Yup. That's about right.] Thats happening nation wide. We are allowing communities to hold hostage programs. We really need to look hard at how we thing about that. we dont need to eliminate it, but it needs a little bit of tweaking. Right now, it is out of balance.

Third point, theres gonna be 2 potential casualties to the increased cost of SWLRT. Bottineau blvd is gonna be hurt. If you think Dakota or Washington counties are gonna fund Bottineau in my lifetime are gonna spend more money after spending so much on SWLRT, thats wrong. Getting them to join CTIB is gonna be more difficult. [This is an important point, that nobody seems to be talking about. I.e. it's the opposite of the Strib's vague extortion threat-y Op-Ed from the other day.]

There are 5 reasons why people choose where to live. Cost of housing, tax structure, schools, safety, commute time. [Neighborhood has nothing to do with it? Walkability has nothing to do with it? I don't wanna live in PB's world.] We need to be mindful of all of those. We need to spend more time and transit budget at looking at industry developing different start times at work, telecommute and work from home, that might help the congestion problem as much as anything else.

CZ: Pleasure to be here with my friends Sue and Peter. [Yeah I bet they hang out all the time and play pinochle.] I am gonna talk a bit more about roads and bridges. [Shocker.] Transportation is interconnected and multi-modal. Transit and roads, all part of this multi-modal vision. At MNDOT, weve changed our vision. We dont love roads and bridges because we like concrete and iron, [no we like them for the nice yellow stripes] we see them the foundation of our health, major safety issue, and our environment.

What do Minnesotans most care about? Most people agree that transportation is the foundation of what we most care about. Second, funding. We do not have adequate funding or all of our systems. Three, there is a business case for investment. There is a return on the whole system, not just transit, though I was involved in the Itasca project at transit system ROI. [ITASCA, I am a secret member of ITASCA. Don't tell anyone] I am gonna give a peek at our math for the direct benefits (vs. the squishy part) for that these investments mean to taxpayers.

First, the link of the entire system to the economy. Ive been traveling the state, and visited with businesses. Manufacturers and others in greater Minnesota. When I tour the Hormel plant or the Polaris plant [DFL swing districts!], I get asked about “logistics." Getting their products in and out of the factories is the #1 concern they have. Not commenting on the tax policy or other issues that do swamp their future prospects, but when I meet at Hormel and look at their robot plant, and say "when you meet with your supply chain investors do you have a MNDOT engineer there at the meeting?" They say "we should."

I ask "What happens when theres a snow event in Austin" [That's MNDOT speak for a big storm] and they close down, the direct cost is $7M for that 24 hour period. And the ripple effect is far greater. How much are we adding those numbers to the operation of our system? [God, talk about squishy, if we add billions of phantom MNDOT cost/savings each time it snows?] It should be practiced. How were prudent for our system. Are we helping our businesses for our prosperity? Thinking strategically? The population is changing, not just the metro but in greater Minnesota. Millieanals have lost the love affair with cars, they love their phones. Which is great. [Pats millenials on head.] But in greater Minnesota, we have older folks who want choice. Greater Minnesota transit is underfunded, and is a concern for people who want to stay in their homes. Bemidji, Virginia, even the suburbs. [DFL swing districts!]

Congestion, actually has an economic factor. [Yeah, not really though.] Its more than stress. Businesses trying to get through the metro look for ways around it because of congestion. Our system is big in Minnesota. Its larger than most states. 50% of our pavements are over 50 years old, 35% of our bridges are over 50 years old. We built a very robust transportation system around the country, and its aging, and we have to look at the cost of maintaining the system we have. [Let's make a "no new roads" pledge, then.]
It's not just roads. We have 135 airports in Minnesota. [Meanwhile, air travel is in decline.] Waterways. Bicycle and pedestrian isnt just an urban issue. I hear about it in Brainerd, Thief River Falls... [DFL swing districts!] How people are living, liveablility is just as much passion in greater Minnesota as well.

Just the states roads and bridges represent 80% of our state assets. 80% of our assets are deteriorating. The credit rating of our state is much like a individual, they say have you fixed the roof. If you have deferred maintenance, the credit rating of our state is compromised. Ive been traveling around with MN-GO, it has goals. Connecting regional corridors, St Cloud, Rochester, Duluth, Bemidji [DFL Swing districts!], how these markets connect with each other. Each community has a story, has a road. I agree with Chairman Bell, the whole notion of economic vibrancy and congestion is very relative. It can be subjective. Everyone is passionate about transportation, not just the metro.

I was on that committee [aka. secret society], it identified $50B, all modes as being in deficiency. Much of that is just to preserve the system we have. $12B for roads and bridges. $7B for what we have, 5B for new mobility [you say mobility, I say useless bypasses. Let's call the whole thing off...], new lanes and new bridges [to rural Wisconsin]. Think about the Metro, more general purpose lanes isnt the answer. [Well I agree with him there...] We have such a low return for what the traffic can bear. Thats why were talking about Mn-pass lanes.

Federal funding, if were lucky it will remain the same. Thats the best case. Theres gonna be a backlog of projects. In my short time here, I disappoint people on a daily basis [yup], not just because of detours but because of projects we wont fund. The land of earmarks has passed us [I wanna go to the Land of Earmarks. How do I get there?], and the formula fed role is gonna diminish. Every state is facing how states have to take the leadership, and provide a higher % of their infrastructure funding.

OK, ROI. I actually believe it. We did studies. [Oh. Well then...] 50 stakeholders and experts about roads, we find (and an outside consultant) determined that theres a $2.5 benefit for every $1 invested in the state, about maintaining and upgrade deterioration. [OK, well if you hired a consultant, then it must be true.] Im a simple bus guy. [I.e. I'm just a caveman...] You buy a bus, you have to maintain it and keep it. After 15 years, you have to buy a new bus. Roads are the same thing. You have to maintain it. We repave roads. Sooner or later, you have to replace the road. If you dont the costs of deterioration become increasingly expensive. Thats the metric thats pretty solid. we need to invest to save money in the future.

We have done more to be prudent with the dollars we have, within projects, more focus on high return investments.

LJ: Whats the best way to fund transportation?

CZ: Its a menu. Theres not gonna be any one source that solves infrastructure funding. The gas tax is efficient, but a crumbled mechanism because its a fixed amount, that over time. It doesnt follow the costs of inflation [Well, it could, if you indexed it] as salt and snow and construction rise, gas tax revenues stay the same or go down because of cars becoming more efficient or (in some areas) people are driving less.

DC used to loan money to the highway fund, but now its been going the other way. There was a gas tax during Clinton, but it was used for general funding. Theres not enough money in the trust fund. In MN we have registration and MVST, the main sources of funding. It you look at all possibilities, many states are looking at general sales tax, what is most politically feasible. Gas tax polls pretty low compared to other sources. [That's putting it mildly.]

LJ: What about congestion pricing? Or the VMT tax? Is the menu gonna remain old fashioned, golden oldies?

CZ: In Oregon and mileage based systems, it's efficient but politically very hard to start something new. [Well if it's hard, we shouldn't do it then.] Privacy concerns about tracking miles... But it's ultimately inevitably in our future that we have other funding mechanisms. Tolling is something that doesnt work well in MN. Most states dont have tolling. That we have MN-PASS is brilliant, but it provides revenue and helps use market forces to use our lanes more efficiently. The workhorse of the system is regular route service, one of the new opportunities to move people is aBRT. Much like the approach on highways, with aBRT we create a faster all day service that mimics the experience of the LRT train and ridership. Easy loading, signal prioritization, easier access for the bus to the loading area and less frequent stops, but more certainty, real time signs. Certainty, reliability, predictability and speed. the right mode in the right corridor we need to focus on.

LJ: You said we need more resources, but the Chamber ["the chamber" is probably where the secret society meets to sacrifice goats or something] said that MNs business climate is worse than other states. Is there a point where the overall burden becomes so onerous that businesses that can will leave?

CZ: Thats the big question. My personal experience, it really depends on the business. Depends on where they are and where their markets are. [This is very sensical.] The tax burden of the business is not primary. Talent, access to markets, and other factors. It is absolutely a concern, and the Chamber does a good job articulating the burden [LOL]. But I know that doing business in a state where you have an educated workforce and infrastructure that provides an advantage, thats why businesses thrive here. Its a balance and we need to keep everything in proportion. When businesses come here, they look at all the costs of doing business, and look at where are the employees gonna be and how will they get to their work. Transit roads do matter. Is there an interchange? Will 610 connect with 94? [It keeps me up at night, that.] Thats a determining factor. Its a balance.

PB: There is a tipping point about the cost of government. We are on a grand experiment. We can look at states like MN, WI, IN, TX, CA, and IL, and states that have a high burden and those that have a low burden and see what the job creation effects are. Its a correlation. Its hard to make a causation argument but therell be strong correlates we can look at in very short order. [E.g. compare Walker's Wisconsin to Dayton's Minnesota... haha Scott Walker!]

LJ: Traffic congestion has not increased in 6 years. When will we move beyond the obsession with congestion and look at changing demands and how to meet them? ["Obsession with congestion..." Larry Jacobs, you are my hero.]

SZ: Congestion continues to be significant and is related to the economy. [Significant and related are super vague words. That's like saying I have a number of Nobel Prizes, even though that number is zero.] During the recession we had a drop and the experience of commuters was different during that area. I can say there are incredibly significant congestion points during peak hours. If you arent driving during peak hours, I drive these corridors all the time and I see congestion as being a really significant issue for people. [NOTE: There are no traffic jams in Flint Michigan] The most important things is its impact on peoples lives. They can be home with their kids, going to soccer, making supper, its makes a difference in peoples lives. There is an increase in people using transit. The percentage of people using transit is growing. VMT to work is not as fast a growth rate as it is in transit. Its about our changing demographics, and the future. 2/3 or more of our households will be smaller households, and those folks are gonna want smaller housing unites. They will cluster in more dense settings. Were making our projections for the region and were not projecting growth at the outer regions at the same rate as past. Its really a change in how we live, and how we choose to live.

[That's it!]


John MacArthur's Distracting Extremism Regarding Charismatic Mov't at Strange Fire Event (Pt. 1)


John MacArthur's Distracting Extremism Regarding Charismatic Mov't at Strange Fire Event (Pt. 1)




Somewhere between the extremes of form and frenzy regarding the Holy Spirit and His manifestation in our times is truth essential to the church and execution of its mission.

Sadly, John MacArthur's Strange Fire conference and perhaps his forthcoming book (I say "perhaps" because I've not read it) seem to take such an extremist position that they potentially distract from the discovery and use of that essential truth in a season when the church needs it urgently.

MacArthur's passion for rightly dividing the word of truth is commendable. A huge number of readers – including Pentecostals and charismatics – have been aided by MacArthur's careful studies of biblical passages, and inspired by his passion for sound doctrine.

This makes his sweeping condemnations of charismatics even sadder. Keep reading

Also see
John MacArthur Responds to Critics Who Believe His Strange Fire Conference Is Divisive, Unloving
In Defense of John MacArthur, Strange Fire Conference and the Challenge to the Charismatic Mov't


For Reform Ambassador at US Mission to the UN, Obama Nominates Leslie Berger Kiernan, Lawyer Who Repped Rangel WH Asked


For Reform Ambassador at US Mission to the UN, Obama Nominates Leslie Berger Kiernan, Lawyer Who Repped Rangel WH Asked


By Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, November 21,updated-- Last Friday we reported that theUS Mission to the UN's ambassador for reform Joe Torsella will leave by the end of the year. Today the Obama administration nominated to replace Torsella the lawyer Leslie Berger Kiernan. The administration's summary is that she has been with the Office of the White House Counsel since 2011 -- and from 1988 to 2011 with the firm Zuckerman Spaeder. There, her highest profile client at least frompublic records was Congressman Charles Rangel. This seems noteworthy, given the nomination for the US Mission position trying to root out UN corruption. Buta lawyer is not his or her client; Inner City Press has sought comment from the US Mission.Update 6:10 pm:The Mission responds that it does not answer nominee questions; the questions have been sent to the White House. In the interim we note thatLeslie Berger Kiernan authored a legal treatise chapter on "Political Patronage and the Revolving Door,"processes too prevalent in the UN.Background: On November 15 the US Mission's Ambassador Samantha Power announced that Torsella will be leaving by the end of 2013.Inner City Pressimmediately tweeted it, along with the suggestion of 21 audit salute, since Torsella focused on the issue of releasing UN audits, pushing forward from where things were under his predecessor at the US Mission, Mark Wallace.(Wallace went, notably, to United Against a Nuclear Iran which appears dis-united on the issue of new sanctions, with president saying no but spokesperson saying members say yes.)Torsella pushed forFifth (Budget) Committeeproceedings to be on UN Television. The Group of 77 responded that other committees like the Second on development and Fourth which included decolonization and work on the rights of Palestinians should also be filmed. Both have happened -- improvements in technology are also involved -- and it's all to the good.Two weeks ago the G77 meeting at which Bolivia became as Inner City Press first reported the successor to Fiji was not initially televised; when Inner City Press and theFree UN Coalition for Accesscomplained, the UN official in charge said it was belatedly on, check before asking. But it was UN staff which also complained, and this automatic defending of the UN is one of the things wrong, in the bigger picture for example on the UN bringing cholera to Haiti. Where does Torsella stand on that, before he leaves? Where does or would Leslie Berger Kiernan stand on it? And a newly arising issues, which Inner City Pressreported on yesterday: should the US State Department support a UN bid for immunity for allegedly bringing cholera to Haiti? We'll have more on that. For now, this on less reported parts of Torsella's legacy:Torsella to his credit wasn't just about the money. The issue of lack of accountability in Sri Lanka got delegated to him, in part because military figure Shavendra Silva was cynically put on Ban's Senior Advisory Group on Peacekeeping Operations. (Clickhere for longer form reporting on Sri Lanka andlastweekend's Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.)In classic UN form, Ban stayed away telling Inner City Press it was a decision of the member states. Without saying more, Inner City Press can report Torsella worked on this. One reason more can't be said is that the US Mission so oftenputs things off the record, sometimes after the fact. Even the farewell for Ambassador Susan Rice was said to be off the record. Inner City Press complied, but scribes more obsequious to the US uploaded selfies of themselves with Rice, and left them up, whileattacking investigative journalismand free press at the UN.This too is an issue in the purview of Torsella and whoever his successor will be. The US should do more on this -- with spying undermining privacy, claims of freedom of the press are one of the definitely US values. Let that be pushed at thelawless UN, not only in 2014 but by Torsella before he leaves.Torsella said the US is opposed to "clean slates," without competition, in UN system elections. But in the recent elections for the Human Rights Council, there was no competition to France and the UK in the Western Europe and Other Group, of which the US is a member. There's more work to be done at and on the UN -- much more. Here's one, in the spirit of reform and transparency: cost cutting proposals in the UN system, largely supported by the US Mission, would involve Americans losing their jobs to off-shoring. Is this the US being selfless? Or just hoping no one puts the contradiction together?Click herefor Inner City Press'exclusive coverage of UNDP's job off-shoring plans, including Accenture report. American Tony Lake at UNICEF is also doing it - but he can say he is an international civil servant. The US State Department and Mission - isn't their job to advance American (and Americans') interests at and in the UN? Watch this site.




Consider God for He Considers You!


Consider God for He Considers You!

The moment we begin too much to look within the more we are lost in the myriads of memories of sin and how horrible we are. Of course the good thing that comes of it is this, we learn and realize how good God is.

I am a person who is constantly looking inward,introspecting, sorting things out inside me, trying impossibly to become perfect every single day. That's all good you might think but there is one thing wrong here! Well the one thing is my focus is me, instead of looking at Jesus and concentrating on His works for my life, I am dwelling on me and I have no hope to give myself on how to get out of my situation.

Therefore I love how David considers himself and looks at his pathetic self and then looks up to God and describes Him and all His grandeur and glory and awesomeness and there he finds his strength and hope!

In Psalm 33 David describes why we should Rejoice in GodFor the word of the Lord is right
All His work is done in faithfulness
He loves righteousness and justice
the earth is full of the loving-kindness of the Lord
By the word of the Lord were the heavens made
The counsel of the Lord stands forever, the thoughts of His heart through all generationsAnd much much more.
For some may ask if all this is true, then why is there so much unrest and sorrow on the earth if God's loving-kindness is all over the earth?18Behold, the Lords eye is upon those who fear Him [who revere and worship Him with awe], who wait for Him and hope in His mercy and loving-kindness
There are a group of people who expectantly wait and watch for His mercy and loving-kindness. God's mercies are spread everywhere and they are visible in the lives of those who wait and depend upon Him! He has given us the choice of receiving or rejecting His mercies for our lives!

As for those who do wait upon Him for their very existence....God watches out for them
18Behold, the Lords eye is upon those who fear Him [who revere and worship Him with awe], who wait for Him and hope in His mercy and loving-kindness,19To deliver them from death and keep them alive in famine.Why not try out this relationship with God your Creator Who is constantly and intently looking at the people on the earth to seek out whom He may bless!

2 Chronicles 16:9For the eyes of the Lord range throughout the earth to strengthen those whose hearts are fully committed to him.