“We are no longer a Christian nation.” — Barack Obama.
“I will stand with the Muslims should the political winds shift in an ugly direction” — Obama in his book “Audacity of Hope.”
President Obama promised us change, no specifics, just change, and he has surely delivered on that promise. Will our nation recover? The stimulus package was loaded with pork and it focused on the public sector, whereas real job creation must come from private business. Government, having no requirement to turn a profit, cannot be trusted to manage anything efficiently. Furthermore, “cap and trade” and the high inflation which will inevitably come from multi-trillion dollar deficits when the current de-leveraging of financial instruments is complete may not be called taxes, but they have the same effect and hurt the poor the most. Obama people have called those who would disagree with these policies terrorists. Interestingly, our Founding Fathers would fit that criteria.
Obama has also loaded his administration with hard-line socialists, of which Van Jones, a self-avowed communist, is an egregious example. Our Founding Fathers knew that power and greed are problems of government so they established a Constitution based on the separation of powers in the federal government and between the government and the states in the 10th Amendment.
“The greater the power, the more dangerous the abuse.” — Edmund Burke.
Obama’s staffing of the White House with 34 Czars says much about his plan to rule our country without opposing views which might arise from the traditional Congressional vetting process. On the legislative side we have these thousand-page bills, created in an atmosphere of panic, so that they would be passed quickly before anybody has a chance to read them. Fortunately, the country was waking up with the health bill, delaying its passage so we could see what was in it. And much of what was in it was ambiguous, and those who would deceive us know how they would interpret it later. Any bill over a hundred pages should be seen as an attempt to deceive.
For a century now those spoken of by presidents Woodrow Wilson and FDR as the “hidden money power” have made end runs around the Constitution to centralize power in Washington. The Constitution leaves management of public education to local authorities. The federal government now controls much of it, together with the National Education Association whose Executive Secretary Givens has said that the mission of the public schools was to implant socialist values in our children. Their agenda, stated at their annual conference, is to have complete control of the education and values of America’s children. Its graphic sex-ed to even the youngest children and throwing God out on dishonest grounds of church and state have contributed immensely to a moral demise in our nation, and moral demise always precedes physical collapse. Such physical collapse may come through the bankrupting spending policies of our government and the continuing war in Afghanistan such as being fought under impossible conditions. A good general picks his battlefield, and it is certainly not one where the enemy can shoot from ambush and hide among innocent civilians.
Although this quote of Voltaire (one of the major architects of the French Revolution) is against Christianity, it would equally apply to what we get from some of our politicians, “In the war against Christianity,” according to Voltaire, “it is necessary to lie like the devil, not timidly, and for a time, but boldly and always.”
— Frank W. Thompson
Greenwood
Flashpoint
FLASHPOINT: Obama administration wages war on Christianity
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FLASHPOINT: Graduation rates are up; great news for Indiana
As Hoosiers celebrate the conclusion of a truly remarkable Super Bowl experience, there is even more good news that should fill us with pride.
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FLASHPOINT: Tech trail leading us into a dense, digital forest
It seems the Southwest Parke schools are the latest to play the laptop lottery game.
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FLASHPOINT: Republicans enable war on middle class, unions
About six years ago at the pinnacle of the Bush/GOP Dictatorship, I began telling you that the wealthy and Corporate America were laying the ground work to politically, financially and physically take over America.
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FLASHPOINT: Howey ignores truth to advance his agenda
Brian Howey’s Jan. 8 column about the U.S. Senate race proves once again that he will not allow the facts or journalistic ethics to get in the way of attacking Richard Mourdock and promoting his chosen candidate, Dick Lugar.
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FLASHPOINT: Putting fairness first
This time of year, with chords of Auld Lang Syne still ringing in our ears, it’s not uncommon or unnatural to think of days gone by as being more desirable than the era we live in today.
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FLASHPOINT: What really motivates right-to-work proposal?
You may have heard about the upcoming “right-to-work” legislation before our lawmakers in the next session of “law making.”
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FLASHPOINT: The right-to-work debate: ‘Devil at Our Doorstep’
As the 2012 Indiana Legislative Assembly convenes, January will represent a tipping point for all Hoosiers’ individual freedoms as politicians and Big Labor draw battle lines to determine if Indiana will become the 23rd right-to-work state.
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FLASHPOINT: State’s House Democrats will offer alternative for job creation
As the leaders of single-party control in state government outline their agendas for the 2012 session of the Indiana General Assembly, it is easy to be cynical about their intentions in the months to come.
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FLASHPOINT: Community colleges must lead way in reshaping higher education
In the 1970s, I began what was three decades in the automotive industry. ... Today, in my position as president of Ivy Tech Community College of Indiana, I see higher education confronted with some of these same challenges.
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FLASHPOINT: There’s little right about ‘right to work’ proposal
The danger contained in these three simple words – “Right to Work” — is that they sound so innocent.
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FLASHPOINT: The next big movement? Reform Congress
We are living through one of the most remarkable times in recent history.
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FLASHPOINT: Christmas trees and crony capitalism
I’ve been involved in selling fresh Christmas trees for as long as I can remember.
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FLASHPOINT: Salute to Rooney and all veterans
When I awoke to the news that CBS’s “60 Minutes” commentator Andy Rooney had passed away I was truly saddened.
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FLASHPOINT: Corporate welfare for Menards?
As near as I can figure from a recent story in the newspaper, our government representatives, state and local, are scrambling to find money to give to Menards because of a distribution center they are thinking about building on the city’s North Side.
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FLASHPOINT: State Archives needs permanent, safe home
The records in the Indiana State Archives are priceless, one-of-a-kind treasures not to be found anywhere else.
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Flashpoint: State Archives needs permanent, safe home
The records in the Indiana State Archives are priceless, one-of-a-kind treasures not to be found anywhere else.
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FLASHPOINT: Attracting foreign investment involves more than business climate
A week before I left Indiana to lead my fifth international trade mission, I met with students at Speedway High School who had visited Japan two years ago. They were sharing their advice on Japanese protocol.
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FLASHPOINT: Scoring the Indiana Chamber
It is a question asked routinely — almost reflexively — during the last days of a General Assembly: “Will the Chamber score this?”
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FLASHPOINT: The growing power of lobbyists
Back in 1982, Mississippi’s powerful U.S. Sen. John C. Stennis faced a tough re-election fight. Advisers told him he had an ace up his sleeve: as chairman of the Armed Service Committee, he could raise bundles of campaign cash from defense contractors. But Stennis balked. “Would that be proper?” he asked. “I hold life and death over these companies.”
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FLASHPOINT: Fiscal hawks: Speak out on state’s largest publicly funded project
Indiana has a number of fiscal hawks among our elected officials who talk tough about ending subsidies and cutting wasteful projects.
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FLASHPOINT: A great company will soon disappear from community
This is in reference to the Tribune-Star story of Aug. 6 concerning the Terre Haute Sherwin-Williams plant’s intention to close by end of the year:
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FLASHPOINT: Collegiate relations committee proposal addresses neighborhood ills
With the beginning of the school year, it is apparent that Terre Haute is a college town in many respects, especially for those who live in the Farrington’s Grove neighborhood, south of downtown.
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FLASHPOINT: Indiana learning from a founding Hoosier family
The Delph family excursion through southern Indiana over the Labor Day weekend was as memorable as it was enjoyable. Lilly turned 5 and got to spend her birthday at Holiday World riding rides and eating sweets. Abby got to drive Dad around on the pretend cars foretelling our new world order. Emma, Anna and Evelyn further cemented their status as rollercoaster girls dragging Mom and Dad on the Voyage, arguably the most brutal ride of all for parents.
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Social media makes news more intimate, more disturbing In decade after 9/11
When a student recently asked what was “the hardest story” I had to cover during my 26 years working at CNN, the question caught me off guard.
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FLASHPOINT: Better access to quality health care can happen
Over 50 million Americans live in areas where there are simply not enough health care providers to meet their basic needs.
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FLASHPOINT: Seeking understanding from insanity of war
On the evening of Sept. 11, 2001, my family and I gathered to watch the unending news reports and the searing images of our homeland under attack.
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How to listen to a politician
As summer draws to a close and next year’s political campaigns get down to brass tacks, you’re going to be hearing a lot more from politicians seeking your vote.
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FLASHPOINT: Congress must help keep American dream within our reach
Since the 2010 mid-term elections, House Speaker John Boehner and his blindly dedicated Republican followers have not introduced a single bill for job creation.
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FLASHPOINT: Howey’s Aug. 21 column was inaccurate
Elected officials accept public debate.
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FLASHPOINT: Measles outbreak demonstrates the need for up-to-date vaccinations
Real incidents that engage national, state and local health professionals can be far more fascinating than television investigative dramas and are clearly more important.
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FLASHPOINT: Graduation rates are up; great news for Indiana








