Isaiah 54: 11-14—“O afflicted one, storm-tossed, and not comforted, behold, I will set your stones in antimony, and your foundations I will lay in sapphires. Moreover, I will make your battlements of rubies, and your gates of crystal, and your entire wall of precious stones. All your sons will be taught of Yahweh; and the well-being of your sons will be great. In righteousness you will be established; you will be far from oppression, for you will not fear; and from terror, for it will not come near you.”

“On your walls, O Jerusalem, I have appointed watchmen; all day and all night they will never keep silent.  You who remind Yahweh, take no rest for yourselves; and give Him no rest until He establishes and makes Jerusalem a praise in the earth. (Isaiah 62: 6-7)

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“For here we are not afraid to follow the truth wherever it may lead, nor to tolerate any error so long as reason is left free to combat it.” (Thomas Jefferson)

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  • Read SnyderTalk the way you would a newspaper.
  • Scan the headlines and read the articles that interest you.
  • Be sure to check out the pages in the column on the right.

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Isaiah 54: 11-14—“O afflicted one, storm-tossed, and not comforted, behold, I will set your stones in antimony, and your foundations I will lay in sapphires.  Moreover, I will make your battlements of rubies, and your gates of crystal, and your entire wall of precious stones.  All your sons will be taught of Yahweh; and the well-being of your sons will be great.  In righteousness you will be established; you will be far from oppression, for you will not fear; and from terror, for it will not come near you.”

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“My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge.” (Hosea 4: 6)

News Items of Interest:

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Israeli Uncensored News

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“When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.” (Thomas Jefferson)

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The document dump has begun. On Sunday afternoon we entered what is sure to be another week, or more, of WikiLeak wonderment. Hundreds of thousands of classified U.S. State Department cables will be dribbled out day after day in a handful of newspapers with titillating revelations about foreign affairs that make us all, in the felicitous phrase of The New York Times, “global voyeurs” looking at the inner workings of diplomacy.

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A cache of a quarter-million confidential American diplomatic cables, most of them from the past three years, provides an unprecedented look at back-room bargaining by embassies around the world, brutally candid views of foreign leaders and frank assessments of nuclear and terrorist threats.

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In late May 2009, Israel’s defense minister, Ehud Barak, used a visit from a Congressional delegation to send a pointed message to the new American president.  In a secret cable sent back to Washington, the American ambassador to Israel, James B. Cunningham, reported that Mr. Barak had argued that the world had 6 to 18 months “in which stopping Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons might still be viable.” After that, Mr. Barak said, “any military solution would result in unacceptable collateral damage.”

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Secret American intelligence assessments have concluded that Iran has obtained a cache of advanced missiles, based on a Russian design, that are much more powerful than anything Washington has publicly conceded that Tehran has in its arsenal, diplomatic cables show.

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King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia has repeatedly urged the United States to attack Iran to destroy its nuclear programme, according to leaked US diplomatic cables that describe how other Arab allies have secretly agitated for military action against Tehran.

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King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia urged Iran‘s foreign minister to “spare us your evil” in a meeting that reflected profound Arab hostility to the Islamic Republic – a recurrent theme of high-level private conversations in the Middle East in recent times.

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An employee of the nuclear plant near Isfahan, who was kidnapped by a separatist group in Iran, has revealed the true goals of the Iranian nuclear program – developing nuclear weapons.

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Iran abused the strict neutrality of the Iranian Red Crescent (IRC) society to smuggle intelligence agents and weapons into other countries, including Lebanon during the 2006 war with Israelaccording to claims in a leaked US embassy cable.

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The leaked diplomatic cables reveal that US diplomats are skeptical about Turkey’s dependability as a partner. The leadership in Ankara is depicted as divided and permeated by Islamists.

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Top diplomats in Ankara see Turkey’s prime minister as a religious “fundamentalist” committed to spreading hatred against Israel, according to the contents of a secret cable published Monday.

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Russia offered Israel $1 billion for advanced drone (automatic aircraft) technologies, and in addition offered to cancel the deal to supply Iran with S-300 missiles, according to an official cable published Sunday via WikiLeaks.

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Israel tried to coordinate the Gaza war with the Palestinian Authority, classified diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks said on Sunday, adding that both the PA and Egypt refused to take control of the Hamas-ruled coastal enclave.

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Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told a group of reporters in Istanbul, which included some Israelis, that he sees Israel disappearing into a binational state which would come under Turkish influence along with the rest of the Middle East.

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Iran’s nuclearization is not Israeli paranoia, as certain camps try to argue. It makes all world leaders, from Riyadh to Moscow, lose sleep. The Iranian issue is the common thread in the hundreds of thousands of documents that were leaked and it produces a narrative whereby the world expects Israel and the United States, in this order, to do something to stop “Hitler from Tehran.”

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The Wikileaks could be a beneficial revelation, a turning point, changing Western perceptions of the Middle East.

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Please forgive me for saying this, but what really amazed me in reading the Wikileaks was how thoroughly they proved points I’ve been making for years. I wouldn’t have had the nerve to say that except that readers have been telling me the same thing.

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Another part of the problem is the Administration’s mistaken view that it could pressure or bribe Israel and the PA into doing what it wants. Yet since neither side has faith in the Obama Administration, both know that it’s weak, and Israel has seen that Washington doesn’t keep commitments, their incentive for cooperation is reduced. In the PA’s case at least, the United States doesn’t even put on any pressure or criticism. In Israel’s case the Administration has not put on the level of pressure that its more extreme officials (and outside supporters) would like to see, though that wouldn’t work either.

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The Fatah Revolutionary Council concluded its fifth convention in Ramallah over the weekend by declaring its refusal to recognize Israel as a Jewish state.

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The Fifth Fatah Revolutionary Council did not have an auspicious beginning. Participants kicked off discussion by giving special honor to Amin al-Hindi, one of the masterminds of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre of 11 Israeli athletes, who died earlier this year. What followed was sheer intransigence on the part of the 120-member Palestinian “congress,” which represents “moderate” Palestinian opinions – as opposed to the radical Islamic Hamas, which openly calls for using violence to bring about Israel’s demise.

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Abu Ahmad, spokesman of the Al-Quds Brigades, the military wing of the Islamic Jihad organization, said that the resistance groups in Gaza have formed a joint headquarters to formulate a strategic defense plan and to fully coordinate their military activity. He explained that, if another war breaks out, the resistance will not restrain itself and its rockets will reach targets beyond Ashdod and Beersheba.

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On Sunday, The Lede is following the reaction online as The New York Times publishes the first in a series of articles based on secret American diplomatic cables obtained and released by WikiLeaks, the whistle-blowing Web site. Articles on what the documents reveal have also been published on the Web sites of four European publications: the Guardian, Der Spiegel, Le Monde and El País.

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Bomb attacks have killed a prominent Iranian nuclear scientist and wounded another in Tehran, state TV reported today.  Attackers riding on motorcycles attached the bombs to the car windows of the scientists as they were driving to their workplaces this morning, the station’s website said.

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Police were investigating today whether any Australian law was broken by the latest leaking of confidential documents by online whistleblower WikiLeaks.

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In an interview on CNBC’s Squawk Box from the Americas Competitiveness Forum in Atlanta two weeks ago, Commerce Secretary Gary Locke was asked if he found it awkward to face the attending Colombians, who have been waiting since 2008 for ratification of their free trade agreement (FTA) with the United States.

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Enough is enough. Every day, the events of the real world reveal that the American foreign policy establishment is wearing nothing but the emperor’s new clothes—policies that make proper people murmur “how Nobel-worthy” while looking around to see if anyone else notices something odd …. The bitter truth is that a world with fewer nuclear weapons really is in the interest of the United States. That is why it won’t happen: Too many countries believe that a nuclear-free world will leave the conventional military superiority of the U.S. unchallengeable.

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House Republicans are choosing their committee chairmen in the next week or so, and one of the biggest decisions will be who runs the Appropriations panel that dictates federal spending. Georgia Republican Jack Kingston is only fifth in line by seniority, but he is making an impressive case that he understands the need to rethink how Congress spends money.

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Now that Republicans have regained control of the House of Representatives, they must take a stand in the battle for control of American education. The issue today is between those who want to federalize education policy and those who want to maintain state and local control of the public schools.

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Congressional Democrats adjourned before the midterm election without extending the Bush-era tax cuts beyond this year. President Obama and a legion of liberal columnists had urged that they do so for families making less than $250,000 a year; only families making more would have seen their tax rates revert to pre-2001 levels. The commentariat scorned the Democrats’ decision not to decide. “Profiles in Timidity” was the New York Times‘ editorial verdict.

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On Sept. 22, 2001, as a wounded nation ached for emotional leadership, Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) delivered one of the most beautiful speeches you’ll ever hear from a politician. It was a eulogy in San Francisco for Mark Bingham, one of the passengers who helped bring down United Airlines Flight 93 on the foul morning of Sept. 11 rather than let terrorists fly the jet into, perhaps, the United States Capitol building. Bingham, a former rugby player who had been a McCain supporter and an active member of the Log Cabin Republicans, was gay.

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The world has many problems, but too few nuclear weapons is not one of them. We would all be safer if North Korea surrendered its nukes and Iran gave up its quest for them. But one longtime U.S. adversary, Russia, has agreed to reduce the size of its stockpile. And here’s the surprise: someRepublicans won’t take “yes” for an answer.

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Today is my first day in the U.S. Senate. With this honor comes a tremendous responsibility to accomplish much for our nation.  My top priority is turning our economy around. In Congress, we had a vigorous debate about the trillion-dollar stimulus. Most Americans agree this policy has failed. Unemployment in Illinois is stuck above 9 percent with more than 640,000 of our citizens out of work. Policies of the past caused our state to fall behind. Ten years ago, Illinois had at least 150,000 more jobs than today.

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There is a way to cut budget deficits without raising tax rates. “Tax expenditures” are the special features of U.S. income tax law that subsidize mortgage borrowing, health insurance, local government spending and more. Although these subsidies are a form of government spending, they are counted as reduced tax revenue rather than increased government outlays. Yet tax expenditures increase the deficit by hundreds of billions of dollars a year, more than the total cost of all non-defense programs other than Social Security and Medicare.

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Can we govern ourselves in the next two years? Do Republicans have any interest in accomplishments that might even indirectly benefit President Obama?

Take: E.J. Dionne is full of it.

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What you need to know about Ireland’s economic crisis is that it’s not about Ireland, a small country of slightly more than 4 million people and an economy of roughly $200 billion. It’s about Europe. For decades, Europe has pursued two great political projects. One is the democratic welfare state, designed to improve economic justice through various social safety nets. The other is European unity, symbolized by the creation in 1999 of a single currency – the euro – now used by 16 countries. The fact that both contributed to Ireland’s troubles suggests that Europe could be on the brink of a broader crisis.

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The background noise in the wonk world these days is of furious debates over economic theory and policy. The foreground is the American economy, which appears strikingly unresponsive. The Federal Reserve’s much-debated quantitative easing (“QEII”) appears, so far, to have had the opposite of its intended effect: It was conceived as a way to push down long-term interest rates so that people would borrow more, but those rates have risen considerably since the Fed switched on its presses. To a non-economist, this is the latest example suggesting the limits of macroeconomic policy and the need for some common sense.

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The Israeli government asked the Palestinian Authority if it would take control of the Gaza Strip in the lead-up to Operation Cast Lead. Hamas will accept a negotiated peace based upon the 1967 borders, although not publicly. And the U.S. government is seeking information on foreign funding of terrorism—in particular from Venezuela and Turkey.

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Ludwig Wittgenstein, one of the 20th century’s most influential philosophers, famously remarked: “Whereof one cannot speak, thereof one must be silent.”

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What the midterm elections proved is that the American people do not trust Barack Obama to lead them. And trust, that magic five-letter word, is the most important element in the relationship between a nation and its government.

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63 House and 6 Senate seats later, “compromise” and “working together” have become the new memes for Democrat progressives and their media apparatchiks. That’s quite an amazing turnaround for those who, only a year ago, rammed a health care bill through Congress without the slightest concern for working together or compromise. It’s the very same bunch whose leader expressed his idea of compromise in two words: “I won.” Still, compromise sounds reasonable — until we get to the actual issues where progressives wish to “split the difference.”

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There’s a blanket of white on Mount Washington, a whiff of snow in the air down here in the valley. Some mornings there’s a rime of ice on the ponds, a thin sheet on the windshields. Everywhere in the North Country there is the sense that a change of season — dramatic, in some ways brutal, in all ways unavoidable — is in motion.

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The fate of the largest job bias lawsuit in the nation’s history — a claim that Wal-Mart Stores Inc. shortchanged women in pay and promotions for many years — hinges on whether the Supreme Court will let the class-action case go to trial.

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Republicans believe they’re in the ideal political climate to defeat PresidentBarack Obama’s bid for re-election. Now, if only they had the ideal candidate.

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We’re fast approaching the halfway point in Barack Obama’s term. With Nov. 2 behind him, everything the president does will be calculated to boost, or at least not harm, his chances of re-election in 2012. What’s not clear is whether he fully appreciates how badly the coalition he led to victory in 2008 has frayed in just two years. A look inside his poll numbers suggests that if he cannot turn around some key trends, he’ll be a one-term president.

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We won’t be able to say we weren’t warned. Continued huge federal budget deficits will eventually mean huge increases in government borrowing costs, Erskine Bowles, co-chairman of President Obama’s deficit reduction commission, predicted this month. “The markets will come. They will be swift and they will be severe and this country will never be the same.”

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Reading the FBI affidavit describing Islamist terror suspect Mohamed Osman Mohamud’s plan to bomb a Christmas tree lighting ceremony in Portland’s Pioneer Courthouse Square is a chilling experience.  Mohamud, a Somali-born naturalized U.S. citizen who attended Oregon State University, told undercover FBI agents he dreamed of performing acts of jihad in which hundreds, perhaps thousands, of Americans would die.  “Do you remember when 9/11 happened when those people were jumping from skyscrapers?” Mohamud asked the agents, according to the affidavit.  “I thought that was awesome.”

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In interviews with 51 committee members, 39 said they preferred Steele not be on the ballot when they meet near Washington in mid-January to pick their leader.

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The rarified world of government was recently shaken to its roots by Chris Christie, Governor of New Jersey. He cancelled a railroad tunnel that was to be built under the Hudson River to connect New Jersey and New York City. Based on the screams from the left-wing media, you would have thought that life in America had come to an end.

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A recent Los Angeles Times headline says it all: “Californians want it both ways on budget.” A poll conducted by the newspaper found that voters adamantly oppose tax increases to cover the state’s massive $25.4 billion deficit. Instead, they favor cuts to the budget—but not any of the cuts necessary to actually achieve a balanced budget. In fact, voters oppose cuts, and prefer even more spending, on government programs that make up 85% of the state’s general budget.

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This may be the biggest actual scandal of the Wikileaks document dump.  So far, the big headlines have gone to such surprising factoids as the State Department conducting intelligence at the UN, the Obama administration playing Monty Hall to get countries like Slovenia to take terrorists from Gitmo (and getting a big zonker for its efforts), and the stunning news that China may have refused to block shipments of missile technology to its client state Iran a few years ago.  What’s next, a diplomatic cable underscoring just how wet water can be?

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How did Paul Krugman win a Nobel Prize in Economics?

In a recent New York Times op-ed piece, Paul Krugman wrote, “What do the government of China, the government of Germany and the Republican Party have in common? They’re all trying to bully the Federal Reserve into calling off its efforts to create jobs. And the motives of all three are highly suspect.”  (See Axis of Depression for details.)

Krugman won a Nobel Prize in Economics.  Articles like this make me wonder about the Nobel Committee, but then I consider that they gave Al Gore the Nobel Peace Prize.  Enough said.

Krugman should take out a piece of paper and write these words on it in bold letters: THE GOVERNMENT DOESN’T CREATE JOBS! Then he should pin it to the wall directly in front of him so he has to see it.  Will it help him remember?  I doubt it, but it’s worth a try.

Ironically, on the same day that Krugman’s article was published, The Times ran an op-ed piece by John Banville titled The Debtor of the Western World in which he wrote, “In the months after September 2008, when the Irish government, after a night-long crisis meeting, was forced to give a guarantee of some 400 billion euros — money we had no hope of ever having — to save the Irish banks from collapse, we used to say that it would fall to our children to pay for our financial folly. Now we know that it will be our children and our children’s children and our children’s children’s children, unto the nth generation, who will bear the burden of our debts, including the ‘substantial loan’ from international lenders that officials now acknowledge is necessary.”

If we’re not careful, we’ll face Ireland’s predicament soon enough, and our debt load makes the Irish debt burden look like nothing by comparison.  As I’ve said before, this war is far from over, and the 2010 midterm election was just the beginning.

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Take on The TimesTM

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THE best opportunity in a generation to improve the safety of the American food supply will come as early as Monday night, when the Senate is scheduled to vote on the F.D.A. Food Safety Modernization bill. This legislation is by no means perfect. But it promises to achieve several important food safety objectives, greatly benefiting consumers without harming small farmers or local food producers.

Take: With more food being imported each year, we need to take precautions to avoid serious health problems.  The FDA has a job to do, and we need to make sure that they have the tools they need to get the job done.  That said, this bill is creating quite a stir.  For example, take a look at the videos below:

Given what I know about our government, I would rather wait until after the lame duck session of Congress before taking up this legislation.  I’ll leave it at that.

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What’s striking about Spain, from an American perspective, is how much its economic story resembles our own. Like America, Spain experienced a huge property bubble, accompanied by a huge rise in private-sector debt. Like America, Spain fell into recession when that bubble burst, and has experienced a surge in unemployment. And like America, Spain has seen its budget deficit balloon thanks to plunging revenues and recession-related costs.

Take: Krugman finally got one right, but toward the end he’s a little myopic.  He can’t resist the temptation to criticize people who are concerned that the actions of the Fed are contributing to our problem.  The US isn’t Spain, but we’re on the same path.  It’s time for us to try another approach.  Printing money and taking on more government debt won’t solve our problem.  It’s called SPENDING.  We’re spending too much, and nothing short of getting spending under control will solve our problem.

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Imagine, for a moment, that George W. Bush had been president when the Transportation Security Administration decided to let Thanksgiving travelers choose between exposing their nether regions to a body scanner or enduring a private security massage. Democrats would have been outraged at yet another Bush-era assault on civil liberties. Liberal pundits would have outdone one another comparing the T.S.A. to this or that police state. (“In an outrage worthy of Enver Hoxha’s Albania …”) And Republicans would have leaped to the Bush administration’s defense, while accusing liberals of going soft on terrorism.

Take: Ross Douthat must be one boring fellow.  He probably fits in well at the NYT.

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There are two sides to every delinquent loan — a lender who made a bad lending decision and a borrower who cannot repay. Yet, banks have never acted as if they bear responsibility for the mortgage mess.

Take: This is another example of shoddy journalism.  I’m not exonerating banks.  Far from it.  They made some terrible loans, but Congress required them to make many if not most of the loans.  Bankers should have screamed bloody murder.

Most banks have bent over backwards to avoid foreclosing on real estate.  As a result, they have accumulated a glut of inventory that they now have to get off their books – thus the foreclosure mess that we face today.  It just goes to show how much damage lawmakers can do when they feel the need to “help”.

We’ll get through this, but I hope we learn one important lesson before it’s over.  It’s something Thomas Jefferson understood many years ago, even though no one has been able to prove that he is the source of this quote.  “That government is best which governs least.”  It’s possible, maybe even likely, that Henry David Thoreau first uttered that line, and it’s true no matter who said it first.

Thomas Paine said it this way in Common Sense: “Society in every state is a blessing, but Government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

The contrast between the philosophies of the NYT editors and their columnists on one hand and people like Jefferson, Thoreau, and Paine on the other is striking.  The Times staffers think they have a monopoly on wisdom, but great thinkers whose ideas have stood the test of time rejected their principles long ago.  We should too.

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In this week of Thanksgiving, it is astonishing to contemplate all that has happened since All Hallows Eve.

Take: This is worth reading.  It points to a fact that I’ve alluded to many times.  When government fails to act or acts inappropriately, people will take the law into their own hands.  Let it be a lesson to our lawmakers and those who want to be lawmakers.

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Natural Healthcare Store, Live the Natural Life!TM

If you haven’t been there already, you should take the opportunity to visit Natural Healthcare Store.  Each product selected for sale at Natural Healthcare Store undergoes rigorous research to make sure that it is the highest quality at an affordable price.

Natural Healthcare Store carries skin care, hair care, and oral care products.  Be sure to check out the Dead Sea products imported from Israel and support the Israeli economy with your purchases.  Natural Healthcare Store carries makeup, deodorant, and detoxification products.  It also carries supplements, weight loss products, and loose leaf tea.  Rounding out its product mix, Natural Healthcare Store carries natural household cleaning products.

Katie and I believe strongly in healthy living, and we use the products.  We’re proud to say that our daughter Melanie owns the store.

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Richard Rives with Just the Facts

Today in Caesarea the ruins of Herod’s Palace can still be seen. It was in Caesarea that the Apostle Paul was imprisoned before making an appeal unto Caesar, and it was here that Vespasian was declared by his troops to be emperor of the Roman Empire.  Before returning to Rome for his coronation, Vespasian assigned the Roman General, Titus, the task of putting an end to the Jewish uprising that was taking place, and in 70 A.D. the final siege of Jerusalem began. After allowing great numbers of people to enter the city of Jerusalem for Passover, Roman forces consisting of some 30,000 troops besieged the city. One hundred and forty three days later, the city was taken. Taken on the same day of the year that Nebuchadnezzar had captured the city in 586 B.C. – a day upon which observant Jews still fast today. An estimated 600,000 people were slaughtered and the temple was reduced to rubble – totally destroyed.

Jesus had warned that this would happen – that everything would be thrown down and that there would not be left one stone upon another. He said that when this began to happen that people should leave the city.  Only those who received their Messiah listened. They knew the voice of the good shepherd and obeyed. We know from history that those people not only believed in Yeshua, Jesus, but they kept the commandments of God.

Now why is this important? There is overwhelming historical documentation that within only 100 years after the time of Christ, commandment keeping believers had been driven away from Jerusalem. As they left, they took with them the faith practiced by those who walked and talked with Christ. Shortly after that time a pagan city was built upon the ruins of Jerusalem and along with the city came the pagan traditions of Rome that would have a great impact on the Christianity of future generations.

Today we are still dealing with those pagan traditions. Time is the Ally of Deceit and over the past 2000 years traditions that cannot be found in the Bible have been gradually introduced and are now accepted by mainstream Christianity.

When I learned that I had been deceived by the theological experts that I had trusted, it was an almost unbelievable surprise. I had to make a decision – Did I want to defend my beliefs or did I want to know the truth? We all have to make that decision.

Well, I decided that I wanted to know the truth and as a result I began to document my findings. After twenty years of work, I have published those findings in two books: Too Long in the Sun and Time is the Ally of Deceit. The new book, Time is the Ally of Deceit, is also available with an optional 5 DVD Study Series.

Satan, our adversary, is the father of lies and the master of deceit. His goal has always been to confuse – to scramble the information we need to make good decisions – a historical puzzle if you will. By way of my books and DVDs I have attempted to put that puzzle together for those who have decided that they are tired of trying to defend the things that just do not add up and who want to know the truth, no matter what. If you are interested in what I have discovered, my materials are now available by way of the World Net Daily Superstore. World Net Daily is all about truth and I consider it a great privilege to be a small contributor.

Contending for the faith once delivered to the Saints:
I’m Richard Rives with Just the Facts.

WATCH THIS WEEK’S VIDEO COMMENTARY HERE

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His Name is Yahweh:

There is a wealth of material available for free download on www.hisnameisyahweh.org including the book His Name is YahwehHis Name is Yahweh is also available at Amazon on Kindle for just $5.  If you haven’t read His Name is Yahweh, you should.  The importance of Yahweh’s Name is becoming more apparent with each passing day.

Available on Amazon Kindle and it can be downloaded at www.hisnameisyahweh.org