William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 2-25-15

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 2-25-15

A large crowd of Frenchmen gathered at Versailles at 4:50 a.m., June 17, 1939. They went to see Eugen Weidmann executed. He was the last person to be publicly guillotined in France.

Obama Unites Israel, Egypt

Shaaban Abdel Rahim Obama Unites Israel, Egypt
Egyptian singer Shaaban Abdel Rahim, who is best known for his hit “I Hate Israel”, has a new song accusing Barack Obama of supporting Hamas and ISIS.

Maybe Barack Obama deserves his Nobel Peace Prize after all.  He seems to have done the impossible and unite the Israelis and Egyptians.

Below is popular Egyptian singer Shaaban Abdel Rahim — whose breakthrough hit was “I Hate Israel” — accusing our president of supporting ISIS and the Palestinian terror group Hamas.

The lyrics include: We don’t want anything from you Obama. Now the people of Egypt know that you are the man of ISIS and Hamas and Obama your trick is now clear. Go to Qatar and Turkey, your allies. God bless the Emirates, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait. They stood by us in our bad time.

We think Rudy Giuliani would say the same thing  if he  could rhyme rhythmically.

Obama Unites Israel, Egypt

Hat tip Breitbart.com

Vaccination Mandates Are Necessary

CHRIS FREIND Vaccination Mandates Are Necessary
By Chris Freind

Mandated vaccinations, or not? That’s the question going viral in America.

And the cure to quell the increasingly nasty debate? Common sense.

Government-mandated vaccination is one of those issues that turn traditional political positions upside down. Some who believe that a paternalistic government knows best are staunchly opposed. On the flip side, many civil libertarians, who abhor governmental intrusion in private lives, nonetheless think that the public must be protected from communicable diseases through required vaccination.

Unfortunately, because misinformation spreads more quickly than measles, the debate has turned ugly, with some even resorting to death threats against opponents. Mandated vaccinations or not, one thing is certain: We’ll never solve this problem if civility and open-mindedness are replaced by hatred.

With objectivity in mind, here is a sober look at the situation:

1. Fact: Vaccines work. They are so effective that many diseases, responsible for millions of deaths, have literally been wiped off the face of the earth. Are they safe? Absolutely. Is that a 100 percent guarantee? That’s an incredibly stupid question, though it’s being asked frequently by some in the anti-vaccination crowd. Nothing is 100 percent except taxes, death, and more taxes.

Rejecting vaccines on the naive premise that a safe outcome can’t be guaranteed should come as no surprise. America has become a risk-averse nation where attempts to “sanitize” everything is commonplace, from the sports field to the classroom to the office. But common sense tells us that’s simply impossible, since real life isn’t always rainbows and lollypops. Never has been, never will be. There is risk in everything, so the best we can do is mitigate those risks and play the odds. Nowhere is that more applicable than in getting vaccinated.

2. Are government-mandated vaccines a slippery slope? Without a doubt. Any time the people willingly give the government that level of power, the possibility exists for abuse and uncontrolled overreach in the name of “the greater good.” Where will it end? Should flu shots be mandated? How about new Ebola vaccines hastily brought to market? Once government mandates (for anything) are implemented, they almost never go away, and continue to grow.

Throughout history, Big Government has run roughshod over individual rights much more than it has respected them. So yes, the possibility is very real that government will go too far should it be given the power to mandate vaccines for certain diseases.

But there is a solution to that problem. It’s called we the people, exercising our unique rights as Americans to call the shots in this country – no pun intended. We, along with the free press, are the ultimate check-and-balance to an oppressive government. It’s our job to ensure it stays within the limits we set. If we don’t, we’ll have no one to blame but ourselves.

But this is nothing new. The price of democracy has always been eternal vigilance.

3. Mandated vaccines should be decided on a case-by-case basis depending on the disease. Sure, the flu is contagious, and kills thousands annually. But since the flu strain changes each year, flu shots are guesswork; they are a solid defense, but never a guarantee against contracting the flu, as this year’s vaccine demonstrated. But that’s apples-to-oranges compared to many of nature’s other, far more potent killers – ones we have defeated – from measles to polio to smallpox.

Determining which vaccines should be mandated is a challenge, but one that with vigilance and common sense, can be solved.

4. Vaccine mandates should not be confused with governmental overreach in other areas, such as when Connecticut forcibly injected chemotherapy into a 17-year old girl who didn’t want the treatment. Since cancer isn’t transmittable, and she was the only person affected, her decision should have been respected.

Contrast that with measles’ 90 percent contagion rate, which jeopardizes newborns and high-risk individuals who cannot be vaccinated, and it’s a no-brainer why mandated vaccinations trump an individual’s rights.

5. Given that the point is to protect the general public from highly communicable diseases, why do schools allow parents to opt out for religious or personal reasons, as they do in Pennsylvania? Having catch-all exemptions defeats the whole purpose of mandatory vaccinations.

6. There must be a system to compensate individuals who have an adverse reaction, from health care to remuneration. Just as unfunded mandates are inherently unfair, so too would be requiring medical injections with no protections for the individual should something go wrong.

Many people aren’t getting vaccinated because they’re buying into the myth that autism is caused by vaccines. It’s not.

There is virtually no evidence to support that claim, especially after a British medical study linking childhood vaccines to autism, often quoted by the anti-vaccination movement, was found to be a total fabrication. Frustrating as it is not knowing what causes autism, it doesn’t help by stabbing in the dark, looking for someone or something to blame, especially when it results in non-vaccinations based on a faulty premise.

And the claim that the pharmaceutical industry is in cahoots with the FDA? Give us a break.

Vaccine profits account for a mere fraction of total revenue – a reason why many companies have exited the vaccine business altogether. In more practical terms, does anyone really believe that in our social media society, where we constantly tell the world everything we’re doing, that a conspiracy on that level would stay secret for more than five minutes?

Ignorance-based misinformation is one thing, but it is abhorrent when parents purposely infect their children at “measles parties” so they become immune “the natural way.” Doing so is child abuse, plain and simple, and parents should be charged. Making decisions that affect only oneself, insane as they may be, is that person’s business. But when the lives of others, especially children, are deliberately placed in life-threatening situations, there is an obligation for the government to intervene.

* * *

“If we’re extinguished, there’s nothing natural about that … it’s just stupid.” So said Matthew Broderick’s character in “War Games” when talking about nuclear war.

If just a single life is extinguished by once-eradicated diseases because the ignorant go unvaccinated, it will show we still don’t have a vaccination for the most prevalent human disease: stupidity.

Vaccination Mandates Are Necessary

David Williams: Father’s Abortion Pain

Pastor David Williams is sharing his heartbreaking post-abortive story on Priest for Life’s Radio Maria. Pastor David Williams is sharing his heartbreaking post-abortive story on Priest for Life's Radio Maria.  David was 19 and a sophomore

David was 19 and a sophomore in college when his first girlfriend got pregnant and they decided to abort their child. But the young woman was traumatized, and the relationship ended soon after the abortion. He began to drink heavily and became promiscuous, but somehow kept up with his studies and graduated with honors.

After he graduated from college and was working his way up the career ladder, David got involved with a woman at work, and she soon discovered she was pregnant. He knew he didn’t want to go through another abortion, so he became, in his words, “pro-life by default.” He married the mother of his child, even though he knew he didn’t love her. “Nothing changed about me except I had a ring on my finger.”

He was still drinking, still sleeping with other women, and he began to develop the same kind of anger that had plagued his father and ended his parent’s marriage. When his son was born, he found he couldn’t even get excited. When he and his wife separated, he felt like he had the best of both worlds. He could see his son when he wanted to, and continue his wild life “without feeling bad about it.”

But the day he watched his wife and son driving away in a U-Haul, and then attended a niece’s birthday party, he felt like “someone took a pin to the hot air balloon of my life. The weight of my sin had become too great.”

Later, when he was alone at home, “it was like God found me in my apartment.” He asked for help with his drinking, his cursing, his promiscuity. From that day, when he was 26, until he married four years later, he was chaste and sober.

But even with his new wife and their children, he still had eruptions of anger and depression. He found it hard to bond with his children, and couldn’t grieve for his mother when she died.

It wasn’t until he was asked to speak at a pregnancy center banquet and was working on his talk that he realized he had never sought forgiveness for his abortion decision, nor forgiven his mother for supporting that choice.

“The Lord allowed me to see the weight of that sin as I had never seen it before,” he said, “and as I spoke that night, I realized God was calling me to be a champion of the unborn.”

His frank talks about abortion, grief and the healing possible through Jesus are now reaching men all over the country.

The live aired Tuesday. It will be repeated 2 a.m. Thursday and midnight Sunday.  All the shows are archived at www.priestsforlife.org/radiomaria.

David’s website can be found here.

David Williams: Father’s Abortion Pain

Sounds 6000 Years Old

The languages of Europe, India and Central Asia are mostly descended from the Proto-Indo-European language spoken 6,000 years ago. Sounds 6000 Years Old

Scholars have been trying to figure out what it sounded like and think they have come close.

Here is the parable of the sheep and the horse as it might have sounded in 4,000 B.C. with the translation below it.

A sheep that had no wool saw horses, one of them pulling a heavy wagon, one carrying a big load, and one carrying a man quickly. The sheep said to the horses: “My heart pains me, seeing a man driving horses.” The horses said: “Listen, sheep, our hearts pain us when we see this: a man, the master, makes the wool of the sheep into a warm garment for himself. And the sheep has no wool.” Having heard this, the sheep fled into the plain.

Sounds 6000 Years Old

Jacqueline Jones of Lindale William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 2-24-15

Jacqueline Jones of Lindale William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 2-24-15

Wonder what Jacqueline Jones of Lindale, Texas wrote to her sister Mrs. Jean Stewart of Springfield, Maine in May 1979. The letter contained 1,113,7847 words and took eight months to write.

Jacqueline Jones of Lindale William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 2-24-15

Pa Liquor Importation Ban Battled

Tri State Liquor Pa Liquor Importation Ban Battled
Shame upon shame if you know where this is. Rumor has it that the deals are better here than at the more yuppified Total Wine.

Pennsylvania State Rep. Joe Hackett (R-161) and Sen. Dominic Pileggi (R-9) have introduced bills that would end the penalty for bringing into the Keystone State liquor, wine and beer purchased elsewhere.

The law now provides for fines of $25 per bottle, cost of prosecution and 90 days in jail.

Both men represent constituencies on or very near the Delaware border and we suspect many, if not most, of their constituents know the address of Total Wine and Tri-State Liquors.

Pileggi notes that  attempt is not connected to the attempts to de-communize the Commonwealth’s liquor distribution system — which he describes as facing a “fundamental disagreement” in the legislature — and expects it to pass.

Still, Wendell Young IV, the well-paid head  of United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 1776 who inherited his $292,765 job from his father, Wendell Young III, has come out against it so don’t expect a slam dunk.

Local 1776’s fiefdom includes the proles in the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board distribution system.

 Pa Liquor Importation Ban Battled

Delco Vet Memorial TV Special

Barbara Ann Zippi tells us that there will a one-hour TV special  in May, which is military month, concerning last November’s inaugural bestowing of the Delaware County Veterans Memorial Freedom Medal. Delco Vet Memorial TV Special

It will air on  Radnor 21 Studio,  most Verizon networks, some Comcast ones and be archived on YouTube.

It is produced by Radnor Studio 21 ARTEMIS Productions at with the camera work done by  Kate Sorrento and BetteAnn Flynn.

Visit here for a preview produced by ARTEMIS Productions for DCVMA.

Delco Vet Memorial TV Special

Obama Christianity Debate

Obama Christianity Debate
President Obama and the mysterious Mark of Dubya that appears on his forehead when stressed

Propagandists masquerading a journalists threw a gotcha question at Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker, a potential GOP presidential nominee.

“Is President Obama a Christian,” he was asked?

“I don’t know,” the Governor said.

Reader Tom Coniglia points out that according to the Bible you judge the tree by the fruit it bears.

While a profession of the divinity of Jesus Christ is not, nor should it ever be, a requirement for the presidency or any public office, there should be an expectation that one is honest about where one is coming from.

Biden 2015.

Say what you want about Joe, you know where he’s coming from albeit he may not be as certain at times.

Obama Christianity Debate

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 2-23-15

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 2-23-15

John Winthrop apple orchard.

John Winthrop was given Governor’s Island by the Massachusetts Bay Colony with the stipulation that he plant an apple orchard on it. He did.