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Five freedoms fueled 1963 ‘March’ – and much more

Gene Policinski is senior vice president of the First Amendment Center
Gene Policinski is senior vice president of the First Amendment Center

By Gene Policinski
Inside the First Amendment
Labor Day weekend is upon us, just a few days this year past the fiftieth anniversary of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s famed “I have a Dream” speech.
On Aug. 28, 1963, King’s speech closed out the “March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom.” It set out a historic milepost in civil rights movement. But King and other speakers – including Walter Reuther, long-time president of the United Auto Workers – also called for equal opportunity in employment.
That focus on workers was right in keeping with the First Amendment, the “blue collar worker” part of the Bill of Rights. The nine other amendments set out limits to government powers. But the First Amendment is the means, mechanism and method by which we actively use freedom to participate in self-governance, including the work required to achieve King’s and Reuther’s vision of equality in the voting booth, the workplace and the public square.
King described the goal: “… the Founders promised “that all men – yes, black men as well as white men – would be guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.”
Clearly, the right of free speech ensured that an entrenched and powerful system of bigotry backed by laws of segregation and the historical customs of separation could not silence its critics. The rights of assembly and petition guaranteed that generations of Americans – civil rights advocates, labor activists, suffragettes and others – cannot not long be dispersed or silenced by government.
The amendment also provided that a free press, while sometimes shamefully slow to do so, ultimately provide a living-room-view of the horrific death spasms of a segregated society. There was no avoiding in the late 1950s and 1960s the nightly TV news views of police dogs and fire hoses loosed on fellow citizens, the magazine articles with indelible images of lynched men, and the newspaper stories and photos of bombed churches and bloody Freedom Riders.
Just 100 years after the Civil War tore at the fabric of the Union, those freedoms provided the path for our nation to take corrective action by a new set of laws to protect voting rights and against discrimination, and to set in motion new attitudes.
Little more than one century after a nationwide controversy was sparked in 1901 when President Theodore Roosevelt invited noted African American educator Booker T. Washington to dinner at the White House, the nation saw the election in 2008 of an African American president, Barack Obama.
President Obama – standing 50 years later to the day on the same Lincoln Memorial steps from which King addressed the march – decried that unemployment for minorities is twice that of whites. Speakers at other National Mall events commemorating the March expanded the call for equality to all minorities, to gays and to immigrants. Critics also assailed the U.S. Supreme Court decision earlier this year to ending what many see as the essential voter protections of the Voting Rights Act of 1965.
Today’s battles over major issues of our day – as in King’s time, including equal rights and jobs – are both fueled by First Amendment freedoms and tempered by the “safety valve” aspect of those same rights. We have thus far used those freedoms to avoid the great fear of the Founders, the “tyranny of the majority” that could freeze policies and programs in place.
Panelists in a July 29 program at the Newseum in Washington, D.C., theorized that King’s closing words echo so strongly down the halls of our history because he spoke both to the issues and aspiration in great American experience of self-governance and self-reliance rooted in five basic freedoms of the First Amendment: religion, speech, press, assembly and petition.
“When we allow freedom to ring, when we let it ring from every city and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jews and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the words of the old Negro spiritual, “Free at last, Free at last, Great God almighty, We are free at last.”
Gene Policinski is chief operating office of the Newseum Institute and senior vice president of its First Amendment Center. You can e-mail him at [email protected].

U.S. Energy Independence is About Freedom

Edward Cross, President
Kansas Independent Oil & Gas Associationkioga

The current conflict in the Middle East only underscores the need for increased domestic energy production. Unrest in oil producing regions around the world will always cause fluctuations in the price of oil. Markets will always react to uncertainty, whatever the source. At its core, U.S. energy independence is about freedom. When the U.S. is not reliant upon oil from conflict regions, we have more flexibility in responding to these inevitable crises. More energy independence gives the U.S. the ability to walk away from or not be drawn into regional conflicts in order to impose oil market stability.

Current policy on oil and gas tax provisions, namely cost recovery mechanisms like percentage depletion cost recovery and expensing of intangible drilling and development costs (IDCs), has produced an American oil and gas revolution that has resulted in a spectacular expansion of domestic energy production and has moved our country to a point where energy independence is within reach. U.S. oil imports are now less than 37% when they were over 60% just five years ago and we measure natural gas reserves in centuries. Thanks to more domestic oil and natural gas development, we are becoming more energy independent every day.

The proper response to market fluctuations resulting from war and rumors of war is to redouble our efforts at achieving energy independence. Misguided proposals to eliminate critical oil and natural gas tax provisions would only serve to undermine U.S. energy production. The solution is to allow American oil and natural gas companies to produce at home more of the oil and natural gas we know our nation is demanding. By encouraging more development of our nation’s ample oil and natural gas resources rather than relying so much on imports, we could significantly enhance our national security.

Contrary to what some in politics and the media have said, the oil and natural gas industry currently enjoys no unique tax credits or deductions. Since its inception, the U.S. tax code has allowed corporate tax payers the ability to recover costs and to be taxed only on net income. These cost recovery mechanisms or tax provisions, also known in policy circles as “tax expenditures”, should in no way be confused with “subsidy”, i.e., direct government spending. Oil and natural gas tax provisions like percentage depletion and IDCs are neither “loopholes” nor “subsidies”, but simply cost recovery mechanisms similar to those used by other industries. These tax provisions are critical for independent oil and natural gas producers to sustain capital availability and formation to promote continued oil and natural gas exploration and production activity. Market-created jobs, rather than those directly created and supported by the government, is a key benefit of increased oil and natural exploration and production activity.

Energy access, not taxes are the key to moving our nation toward energy independence and unlocking new jobs for Americans. America has spilled far too much blood and treasure in conflict regions due to our dependency on foreign oil. Oil and natural gas tax provisions like percentage depletion and IDCs allow American energy producers to put that money back into exploration and development of U.S. oil and natural gas supplies, creating jobs and strengthening freedom.

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. These views and opinions do not represent those of the Post News Network and/or any/all contributors to this site.

Book Review: Living with Less

Book Review: Living with Less  (Author  Mary Lambert)Screen Shot 2013-08-27 at 7.16.06 AM

Many people think that the more they own, the more contented and happy they will be – their lives become defined by their possessions. In fact, the opposite is often true: the more we have, the less happy and contented we are in mind, body and spirit. In Living with Less, decluttering expert Mary Lambert sets you the challenge of reducing your personal possessions to just 100 items.

… which is a little misleading. Lambert does introduce a process of decluttering that is do-able and makes it accessible for many who have a hard time getting rid of things. However, she almost makes it too easy, bundling items together (she counted scarves as a single item on her list but had 12 of them, etc.). So while I was cynical when I looked at her list, the book itself did motivate me to go through my closet and let go of a lot of things. I also appreciated her perspective of purchasing less to begin with, so then you don’t have to declutter later. The step-by-step guides get a little repetitive (“Get one trash bag and label it TRASH, get one and label it DONATE” listed for each and every category of items), but you can glean a bit of helpful information and at least be motivated to clear out.

2 out of 5

Marleah Augustine is the Adult Department Librarian at the Hays Public Library

You can see more of her blog here https://hayspubliclibrary.wordpress.com

Use them right

By John Schlageck, Kansas Farm BureauInsight

Is there a shift in human focus and concentration, or is it just me?

While waiting in the foyer of a well-known seafood restaurant in Kansas City, I counted a half a hundred people milling about, engaged in some form of interaction – primarily with themselves.

Yes, there are others with them, but these people are head-down on their phones. I’m certain you have both seen them or been one of them. Maybe you’re reading this on your mobile device right now.

Phone usage and etiquette have changed significantly during the past few years. Before Apple launched its iPhone on June 29, 2007, all you could do on a phone was send and receive calls – and painfully text.

Can you ever forget your first text – 1,2,3 or maybe it was a,b,c. In technology terms, that was eons ago.

Cellular phones are smart today. Most of the time they are smarter than their users, especially in my case. They are as much app driven as talk and text.

Consider all the possibilities: e-mail and the Internet, personal calendars, Facebook and other social media apps, Google and other search engines, the latest news and markets, camera, music, movies, solitaire and other games, PayPal and who could live without Amazon (where eager consumers can buy anything their hearts’ desire while reading just about every book ever written), and if you think about it – your phone or tablet has become your end all, be all communication device.

I’m waiting for the next great apps to come down the pike like the cab, chauffer, house, maid, cook, house cleaner – you know a phone that will literally take care of me and pamper me while I’m busy communicating. Whoa Bessie, I’m getting ahead of myself. There are plenty of other technological marvels just around the corner like voice recognition that may just be the latest, greatest breakthrough.

Many of us are not masters of our own phones. We use the programs we need and rarely explore new ones, unless badgered to do so by a friend. Don’t believe me, think about the apps you use.

Most people who know me realize I am still mired firmly in the Dark Ages of smart phone technology. Still, I’m trying to move ahead using what I refer to as baby apps. I sought out a young, computer wizard friend the other day to help me with the fundamentals of smart phone usage. Here are some of the best how-to-do-its we came up with:

1) How to use it mechanically – not just to turn it on and off. Your phone holds the key to mysteries and magic that can fill the hours with joy, mirth and most importantly dividends once you master its technology.

2) How to use it mannerly. You know, the when and how loud are key to your perceived image.

3) How to enhance your communications. Texting is the new black? Data transmission exceeds voice transmission – by a lot. When e-mailing how are you perceived? How do they read it? Is it, “C U L8r” or “See you later?” Is it “LMK” or “Let me know?” You tell me. I don’t abbreviate. Sister Benigna Consolata wouldn’t approve.

4) How to use it to allocate your time. Use your stopwatch feature to measure the total amount of time you spend on your phone. It’s easy to hit start-stop-memory each time you pick up your phone. Your total at the end of the day will shock you – but not as much as multiplying the total by 365.

5) When you’re by yourself – be aware of the time. Minutes soon become hours and hours days.

6) When you’re by yourself, but others are within hearing distance, speak at half- volume, and keep it brief.

7) In an informal gathering, ask permission first. Use your judgment as to what to ignore. Be respectful of the time and attention paid to people you’re with.

8) In a business meeting – never.

9) In a restaurant. Beyond never. It’s rude.

10) In church. Don’t even think about it.

On a flight to California a couple months ago I thought I’d stepped into a bad movie when the following scene played itself out before and after we landed. First the milling of the masses up and down the aisles as all the overhead luggage was stowed. Then the passengers were safely buckled and the flight attendants told everyone to power down. Plane landed and every passenger was on his or her phone or staring at it. Exit, door left and they walked off the plane like lemmings marching to the sea.

In reality, people are walking into walls, tripping, bumping into one another, and crashing their cars while looking at and using their smart phones. I saw a cartoon in The New Yorker a few months ago that showed a woman on her phone saying, “I’ve invited a bunch of my friends over to stare at their phones.”

Like it or not, the smart phone is here to stay. It’s economical to use and applications are increasing daily.

Our challenge is to make the best use of it we can.

Good luck and, May the smart be with you.

John Schlageck is a leading commentator on agriculture and rural Kansas. Born and raised on a diversified farm in northwestern Kansas, his writing reflects a lifetime of experience, knowledge and passion.

Kansas Dem Weekly Wrap: Tim Huelskamp – Nasty, Brutish, and Short

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. These views and opinions do not represent those of the Post Kansas DemsNews Network and/or any/all contributors to this site.

Claiming the title of worst Kansas politician is a tall task these days given the continual new lows being set by our Republican elected officials at the state and federal level.

Kansas GOP legislators hell bent on undermining our “elitist” public education institutions? Monumentally short-sighted and vindictive, but nothing new for people who want to drown government in a bathtub.

What about Governor Sam Brownback and his constant cronyism? Last session he rammed through new state laws giving him unilateral power to appoint judges just so he could appoint his own chief counsel, Caleb Stegall, to the Kansas Court of Appeals. Sadly, that’s just typical Brownback partisan power politics.

Surely Kris Kobach, our part-time Kansas Secretary of State and full-time witch hunter, can make a strong claim for worst politician ever. This week he started another wasteful lawsuit to try and make voting as difficult as possible AND had his immigration policies called “horrific” by his own Republican National Committee chair. Winner, right?

Nope.

Even that pales in comparison to the nastiness Rep. Tim Huelskamp displayed this week (and every week). First,Tim trotted out lie after lie about school lunches, food stamps, and the work Kansas State Research and Extension does informing people about health care law changes.

Then Tim refused to help constituents who had questions about Obamacare. Tim has already said he wouldn’t help Kansans struggling with insurance bills and pre-existing medical conditions, offering the snide advice: “Call your former governor.”

He took that attitude one step further at a townhall meeting on Monday, proudly admitting that his office is discouraging his constituents from signing up for Obamacare.

As the Hutchinson News rightly fumed:

“Why would you tell any citizen of the country, a constituent of your district, not to sign up for government benefits to which he or she is entitled? That is confounding, if not treasonous. That’s like telling a veteran not to sign up for veterans’ benefits or a senior citizen not to go on Medicare. Will Huelskamp tell constituents not to send their kids to public schools because of the new Common Core academic standards that he also opposes?”
If you’re Tim Huelskamp you might do all those things because scoring petty political points comes before the well-being of your constituents. Is there any other explanation for the congressman who voted against the Farm Bill while representing the largest agricultural district in the country?

– See more at: https://www.ksdp.org/blog/kdp-weekly-wrap-tim-huelskamp-nasty-brutish-and-short#sthash.DsPsiJlX.dpuf

This week at HPL

CHILDREN AND YOUNG ADULT (YA) PROGRAMSHPL Logo

Monday, Aug. 26

10:00 AM Storytime

11:00 AM Storytime

3:30 PM Tutoring

4:00 PM Games

4:00 – 4:40 PM Bal-A-Vis-X (pre-register at www.hayspublib.org or call 785-625-591)

6:30 PM Storytime

Tuesday, Aug. 27

10:00 AM Storytime

11:00 AM Storytime

4:00 PM Dance Fever

Wednesday, Aug 28

10:00 AM Storytime

10:00 AM Hora De Leer en Espanol

10:45 AM Lapsit

3:30 PM Cake Buddiest (YA)

4:00 PM Whoa! Did you see That? Science Experiments

4:00 – 4:40 PM Bal-A-Vis-X (pre-register at www.hayspublib.org or call 785-625-591)

Thursday, Aug. 29

10:00 AM Storytime

11:00 AM Digital Storytime

3:30 PM Make-n-Take (YA)

4:00 PM Art Start- Whacky Windmills

Friday, Aug. 30

10:00 AM Cre-8-tive Moments

4:00 PM Wii (YA)

September 1-2
Library Closed

ADULT PROGRAMS AND EVENTS

Monday, Aug.26
5:30 PM Book Club on Location- Italy

Tuesday, Aug. 27
5:30 PM read2reel- “The Hunger Games”

Wednesday, Aug. 28
12:00 PM Feed & Film- Adult
6:00 PM Mindfulness and Meditation

Thursday, Aug. 29
6:00 PM Once Enemies, Now Friends: A presentation on the Vietnam War
6:00 PM Computer Class- Adult

7:00 PM Diabetes Discussion Group (new!)

Saturday, Aug.31
2:00 PM Crafternoon: Balloon Wreath

September 1-2
Library Closed

Will beef production plummet with Zilmax suspension?

John Maday, Managing Editor, Drovers CattleNetwork

Amid all the discussion and debate around the issue of Zilmax (zilpaterol hydrochloride) over the past two weeks, one thing is clear:Drovers Cattle The product performs as advertised in terms of boosting carcass weights and lean-meat yield. So when Tyson announced on August 7 it would place a moratorium on purchasing cattle fed Zilmax due to animal-welfare concerns, followed by Merck Animal Health temporarily suspending sales of the product on August 16, speculation arose as to how the reduction in beef production would affect markets.
And indeed, fed-cattle futures and boxed-beef prices have moved higher, with anticipation of shorter beef supplies probably playing a role.
However, industry reports suggest the impact of removing Zilmax from finishing programs, while significant, might not be as dramatic as some have speculated.
In USDA’s Livestock, Dairy and poultry Outlook report last week, the agency speculates that impacts on beef supplies could be mitigated by feeders switching to the alternative beta agonist product – Optaflexx (ractopamine hydrochloride) – and by lower corn prices allowing feeders to cost-effectively feed cattle to heavier weights. The USDA report was issued after Tyson’s decision but before Merck announced its suspension of sales.
In Monday’s Daily Livestock Report, authors Steve Meyer and Len Steiner note average fed-cattle carcass weights in 2012 increased by about 19 pounds, or over 2 percent, compared to those during 2011 – a relatively large jump after five years with little to no increase. That increase in carcass weights corresponds with widespread adoption of beta agonists.
The authors also note that many cattle feeders currently using Zilmax likely will switch to its competitor Optaflexx during the suspension. They estimate the switch would reduce carcass weights by six to eight pounds.
The USDA report points out that before Tyson’s letter to cattle feeders, the five-day moving average for beef cutout values had begun to seasonally increase from a low of $180.54 per hundredweight on August 5, 2013. On Monday, August 19, the Choice cutout averaged $195.22 per hundredweight. The increase is consistent with seasonal patterns, and the authors say any boost in wholesale cutout values if beef supplies are tightened as a result of Tyson’s Zilmax ban will likely be relatively small. As noted, their analysis came before the Merck decision to temporarily suspend sales of the product.
Nevertheless, it seems likely that lower corn prices and the option to use another beta agonist will help moderate any decline in beef production.

HRC Update

Deadline Wednesday Gazette

Welcome to this week’s edition of Deadline Wednesday Gazette.

Here you will find information about deadlines and other exciting things going on at the Hays Recreation Commission!

Please feel free to e-mail us with comments, questions or concerns.

We love to hear from you!

FrontCoverSmall.jpgFALL-WINTER HAYS REC TIMES

*The Fall Winter Hays Rec Times will be in Ellis County Mailboxes Friday, Sept. 6th!!

*Online Registration will begin at 12:01am on Friday, Sept. 6th.

*In Office Registration will begin at 8:00am on Monday, Sept. 9th.

*The webpage will be updated the first week of September.

 

 

DEADLINES FOR AUGUST 28TH

If a class is full PLEASE put your name on the waiting list.  We always do our best to accommodate everyone so if you are not on the waiting list and we add an additional class you will miss out!

TINY TAS (2-5 YEAR OLDS)

notes_fly_out_md_clr.gifMUSIC SPARKS SHARING_- TRAINS

All aboard! Trains in songs, the rhythm of their movement, the sounds we might find will be explored with the support of grandfriends

Entry Deadline:  August 28

Entry Fee:  $25.00 4-weeks

Held on:  Monday’s – September 9 – 20

Time:  10:30 – 11:10am

Ages:  18 months – 5 yrs. w/an adult

Location:  Cedar View

Limitations:  Min. 4   Max. 8

Instructor:  JoAnn Jordan, Board Certified Music Therapist

alarm_running_2_md_clr.gifUPCOMING DEADLINES

September 4th

Kansas State Fair Trip

Kansas Profile – Now That’s Rural -Gary Musselman – KSHSAA

By Ron Wilson, director of the Huck Boyd National Institute for Rural Development at Kansas State University.KSU research & extension

School is back in session and fall sports are gearing up. Have you ever wondered: Who coaches the coaches? Who officiates the officials? Who records the records? And for that matter, who leads the youth leaders? It is essential that there is a state high school activities association which leads and regulates these activities. In our state, that association is led by an executive who will now be serving at the national level as well. He comes from rural Kansas.

Gary Musselman is executive director of the Kansas State High School Activities Association. The KSHSAA is a statewide, self-funded, non-profit association which organizes, governs, and regulates interscholastic activities. In Kansas, the association has more than 750 member schools including middle and high schools, public and private.

Gary Musselman has rural roots, having grown up at Ness City. He was actually born in the nearby community of Ransom, population 326 people. Now, that’s rural.

From the time he was a sophomore in high school, Gary knew he wanted to be a teacher and a coach. He went to K-State for his secondary education degree and later earned a master’s in secondary school administration from Wichita State. Through the years, Gary served as a teacher and coach at Independence, Andover, Beloit, and Halstead. He was the high school principal at La Crosse before joining the staff of the KSHSAA in 1988 and becoming executive director in 1996.

So what are the functions of the association? Some of the organization’s activities are highly visible, such as the state tournaments for high school sports. Others are less well known such as the scholars bowl, music festivals, or debate programs. The association keeps a list of state winners and state records in athletics and also supports the Kansas Association for Youth organization and student councils.

“Annually, more than 105,000 kids are in school athletics across Kansas,” Gary said. “Another 30 to 50,000 participate in competitions such as music or debate.” Each of these activities needs a common set of rules which the activities association provides.

“We have a legislative board of 78 elected representatives of schools across the state which makes the rules,” Gary said. “Then we have an executive committee and a separate appeals board to which a parent may appeal a ruling. Only a small fraction of the work we do involves rules enforcement,” he said.

Gary believes that school activities should be a laboratory for learning, a place to learn sportsmanship and citizenship in a way that reflects the educational values of Kansas.

“A 2008 University of Kansas study showed that 94 percent of the 2,000 kids who dropped out were not involved in school sports,” Gary said. “When kids are engaged (in activities), it is very meaningful to their educational success. School activities help kids learn life skills.”
In addition to the KAY leadership program, the association operates a student council summer workshop. For coaches, the association offers mandatory rules tests which coaches must pass with 90 percent proficiency. For officials, the association offers registration, testing, and training for nearly 5,000 men and women. For schools, the association offers the opportunity for fair student competition, plus specific benefits such as catastrophic insurance coverage for student-athletes.

Now Gary’s leadership is being taken to the national level. In 2013, he was selected to serve a four-year term on the Board of Directors of the National Federation of State High School Associations based in Indianapolis.

“I am blessed and honored,” Gary said. “We are planting seeds. It is rewarding being involved with things that help kids develop.” For more information, go to www.kshsaa.org.

School is back in session, and so are fall sports. So who officiates the officials? Who coaches the coaches? And who leads the student leaders? The Kansas State High School Activities Association. We commend Gary Musselman and all those at the activities association, plus all those involved in our schools and our teams. They are making a difference by supporting these activities which keep our kids active.

Opinion: Obama’s War on Religion in the Ranks

The views and opinions expressed in this post are solely those of the author. These views and opinions do not represent those of the Post News Network and/or any/all contributors to this site. 

If Army chaplain Emil Kapaun served in Afghanistan today rather than Korea six decades ago, President Obama would probably give the

huelskamp.jpgCatholic priest discharge papers instead of the Congressional Medal of Honor.

In Obama’s Army, the Pentagon brass is ordained in the priesthood of political correctness, while devout Christians such as Medal of Honor recipient Emil Kapaun are shunned and ostracized.  At all times between the presidential terms of George Washington and George W. Bush, the open practice of Christianity in the ranks was widespread and the open practice of homosexuality was deemed incompatible with military service. In the Obama era, the reverse is true.

President Obama is a wartime Commander-in-Chief. No, I don’t mean the obvious (Iraq or Afghanistan). I’m talking about his preference for waging a race war, a gender war, class warfare, generational warfare, and – with escalating aggression and mounting casualties – a culture war.  With the exceptions of free enterprise and traditional marriage, no institution has been more “radically transformed” by the Obama regime than our Armed Forces. Given President Obama’s notorious contempt for Americans who “cling to their Bibles” and “guns,” perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised by his Administration’s hostility to service members who espouse traditional Judeo-Christian beliefs.

The persecution of Christians and conservatives has become increasingly brazen and pervasive since the President took office four and half years ago.  To “protect patients” from proselytizing or prayer, Walter Reed Army Medical Center banned wounded warriors’ family members from “bringing or using Bibles” during visits. The Department of Veterans Affairs barred Christian prayers at a National Cemetery. The President signed the law that repealed “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” the Attorney General refused to defend the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) in court, and the Department of Defense authorized unholy “matrimony” ceremonies at military installations even before the Supreme Court struck down part of DOMA.

A war games scenario at Ft. Leavenworth identified evangelical Christian groups as a national security threat.

A field grade officer listed the American Family Association and Family Research Council as “domestic hate groups” and directed his subordinate officers to monitor soldiers who might be supporters. Evangelist Franklin Graham was un-invited from the Pentagon’s National Day of Prayer service.  A training exercise funded by the Department of Homeland Security portrayed home-schooling families as the domestic terrorists.

Last year, I introduced the Military Religious Freedom Protection Act. The bill requires the military to accommodate service members’ moral principles and religious beliefs so long as they don’t “threaten good order and discipline,” forbids the military from using an individual’s beliefs as the basis for an adverse personnel action, and forbids the military from forcing chaplains to perform homosexual marriage ceremonies.  My bill’s language was included in the National Defense Authorization Act passed by Congress last December.

When President Obama signed it into law, he claimed the conscience protections I authored were “unnecessary and ill-advised.” But recent events confirm the new law was necessary, well-advised, and prophetic. These episodes exemplify the new military culture, one that rebukes those who practice Christianity and rewards those who worship at the altar of political correctness.

Army Master Sergeant Nathan Sommers’ superiors told him to remove the conservative, Republican, and scripture-quoting bumper stickers from his personal vehicle.  He was told he must avoid being seen reading books authored by Mark Levin, Sean Hannity, or David Limbaugh while in uniform.  He was investigated for serving Chick-fil-A food at his promotion party to express his support for traditional marriage.  In retribution, the Army is pursuing trumped up disciplinary charges against him.

The Utah Air National Guard cancelled the six-year re-enlistment contract of Tech Sergeant Layne Wilson because he told a chaplain he thought the chapel at West Point shouldn’t be used for a homosexual wedding.  An Air Force officer was required to hide from view the Bible he once kept on top of his desk.  An Air Force chaplain’s video tribute to sergeants was banned for fear it would offend an “agnostic, atheist, or Muslim.”  The chaplain’s video narration said: “On the eighth day, God looked down on His creation and said, ‘I need someone who will take care of the Airmen.’ So God created a First Sergeant.”

Coast Guard Rear Admiral William Lee told a National Day of Prayer audience that Christian service members are being told to hide their faith and religious liberty is being threatened by Pentagon lawyers.  Army Reserve training materials listed Evangelical Christianity, Catholicism, and Orthodox Judaism as extremist religious groups alongside Al-Qaeda and Hamas.  This is especially outrageous since the Obama Administration continues to classify the mass shooting at Ft. Hood (in which 13 people were killed by Army Major Nidal Hasan) as “workplace violence” rather than admit it was a terrorist attack carried out by a radicalized Muslim.

In April, several Generals consulted Mikey Weinstein – the anti-Christian zealot dedicated to attacking men and women of any faith — to solicit his help writing Air Force policies concerning “religious tolerance.”  If there’s one person whose advice the Pentagon brass shouldn’t solicit, it is that of Mr. Weinstein, a man who says the military ranks are full of “Christian fundamentalist monsters” whose evangelizing constitutes “spiritual rape,” “a national security threat,” and “sedition and treason.”  After Weinstein telephoned the Pentagon to complain about a painting displayed at Mountain Home Air Force Base in Idaho, it was removed less than one hour later.  The painting bore the word “Integrity” and the citation “Matthew 5:9” (the verse says:“Blessed are the peacemakers for they will be called children of God”).

Mr. Weinstein bragged to The Washington Post that the Defense Department expressed its willingness to ban proselytizing (i.e., evangelizing, sharing one’s faith, or spreading the Gospel) and added, “We need half a dozen court-martials real quick.”  Days later, the Pentagon issued a statement to the news media that announced: “Religious proselytization is not permitted within the Department of Defense.”  After reading about this alarming situation on my Facebook page, a Sergeant First Class posted the following comment: “This is why I am retiring. … The liberals are destroying our values.”  One wonders how long before the radical Weinstein and his Pentagon pals find and punish this Sergeant.

These revelations highlight the fact that Obama’s war on God-fearing servicemen is not only morally repugnant, but also threatens the long-term soundness of our voluntary military. Who wants to join an organization that increasingly caters to homosexual and atheists, meanwhile denigrating Christians and traditional marriage?  If you care nothing at all about the constitutional free exercise rights of our servicemen, surely you can at least see the dangers to military readiness posed by such harassment and persecution.

In April, I attended the White House ceremony at which President Obama presented Ray Kapaun with the Congressional Medal of Honor awarded posthumously to his uncle, Chaplain (Captain) Emil Kaupan. A farm boy from my congressional district in Kansas, the “Patriot Priest of the Korean Conflict” saved countless lives of fellow soldiers on the battlefield, along the death march to the Pyoktong Prisoner of War camp, and during the seven months of captivity that preceded his murder by communist Chinese guards in May 1951.

I can only imagine what Mr. Weinstein would say about the “how to witness Christianity” proselytizing clinic that Fr. Kapaun put on in the POW camp or this report of repatriated American soldiers: “He was their hero – their admired and beloved ‘padre’. He kept up the G.I.’s morale, and most of all [caused] a lot of men to become good Catholics.”

It speaks volumes that Fr. Kapaun had Protestants, Jews, and atheists saying the Rosary, singing the Lord’s Prayer, and praying together at the Easter sunrise service he led, all in defiance of the communist camp guards who ridiculed his devotion to faith and punished him for it. In a detailed account of the priest’s life, Arthur Tonne wrote: “He has transmitted to every one of us a new appreciation of America, and a keener, more realistic understanding of our country’s greatest enemy – godlessness.”

When Fr. Kapaun was being carried to the “Death House” (i.e., isolation without food or water), the Muslim POWs from Turkey stood at attention to honor him.  According to witnesses, Fr. Kapaun blessed the very guards who were murdering him by saying, “Forgive them, for they know not what they do.”  President Obama should be earnestly and prayerfully seeking more such men, not forging a military where they are not welcome, or where the very actions that once earned them the Medal of Honor are now forbidden by the Commander-in-Chief.

Only in America … actually, only in Barack Obama’s and Mikey Weinstein’s America ..

 

Safety in the sun

By John Schlageck, Kansas Farm BureauInsight

My dermatologist recently shared with me a list of five ways to die on a golf course. The five ways include hit by a golf ball, run over by a golf cart, whacked by a golf club, struck by lightning and forgot your hat.

While none of these possibilities is pleasant to contemplate, the threat of skin cancer is real and should be considered carefully.

Every year one million new cases of skin cancer are detected, according to the American Academy of Dermatology. One out of five people in this country develops skin cancer during his/her lifetime.

Americans love vacations with their families – many of these trips include trips to the beach or outdoor amusement parks. Many others work for long hours in the sun during the summer months – farmers, ranchers, construction workers and amusement park attendants.

If you spend several hours in the sun, protect yourself. Avoid the midday sun if at all possible. Cover up. Always wear a hat. Work in the shade whenever possible. And don’t forget to wear sunscreen.

Melanoma is the deadliest form of skin cancer. One person dies every hour from this disease in the United States, according to the American Academy of Dermatology.

Fortunately, melanoma can be completely cured if it’s caught early enough. Dermatologists advise us to examine our skin regularly.

If you find a blemish larger than a pencil eraser, multi-colored, asymmetrical or irregular at the edges, you may have melanoma and should see your dermatologist.

While we should protect ourselves from potential skin cancer, we should be every bit as aware of this danger for our children. Overexposure to sunlight during childhood will affect children for the rest of their lives.

Studies show that damage from the sun to a child’s skin can actually increase the odds that he or she will develop skin cancer as an adult.

The American Academy of Dermatology estimates 80 percent of a person’s total lifetime sun exposure occurs in the first 18 years.

Protect your children. Cover them up. Teach them to wear long-sleeved cotton shirts that breathe. Make sure they wear head protection at all times. Make wearing sunscreen part of the ritual for gearing up for the sun.

While skin cancer can kill you, it’s much more likely to disfigure you. Each year, thousands of Americans lose chunks of their skin to this disease. Some people lose their nose; others may lose their ears, while others may get off with only the loss of an eyebrow.

Examine your skin regularly, at least once a week. Look for warning signs.

If you find anything bleeding, crusting or not healing, see your dermatologist immediately. And if you want more information on how to identify skin cancer visit www.aad.org.

It’s all right to enjoy the sun and spend time outside. Remember these common-sense suggestions, have fun, and like everything else in life – enjoy the sun in moderation.

Base Jumper at KC’s Liberty Memorial

An officer in the British Army and a BASE jumping World Champion, performed a successful BASE jump from the Liberty Memorial at the National World War I Museum in Kansas City on Monday morning.

Major Alastair Macartney, 37, parachuted from the 217 feet high structure to raise awareness for members of the Armed Forces, past and present, 99 years after the beginning of World War I. After jumping Macartney present a veteran of the Vietnam War with an American flag.

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