Thursday, December 3, 2020

Biden a patsy for unAmerican ideas, forces

This article was published in the Monday, October 19, issue of The Journal Gazette.  

 

UNELECTABLE — Biden a patsy for unAmerican ideas, forces

The election of 1860 may have been the most critical election in the history of the United States, but the election of 2020 is the most critical election in our lifetimes. 

I read the paper, and I must share another side of reasoning. 

• Joe Biden has total disdain for the truth. 

He has lied about his stance on fracking. On March 15, 2019, he said he wanted “no more subsidies for (the) fossil fuel industry. No more drilling on federal lands. No more drilling, including offshore. No ability for the oil industry to continue to drill, period.” On September 6, 2019, Biden said, “I guarantee you we’re going to end fossil fuel.” In April 2019, vice presidential candidate Kamala Harris said, “There’s no question I’m in favor of banning fracking.” But during the vice-presidential debate, Harris said that she and Joe are very clear — they will not ban fracking. 

He said he graduated in the top half of his law class at the University of Syracuse law school. In truth, he graduated at the bottom half of his law class (76th out of 85). He stated that he was the only one in his class to receive a full academic scholarship. Not true. He said he graduated with three degrees; nope, he graduated with one. He said he was named outstanding political science student; he was not.

He has plagiarized several notables, including Hubert Humphrey, Robert F. Kennedy and British politician Neal Kinnock.

He said he attended a historically black college or university (HBCU). “I got started out of an HBCU, Delaware State,” Biden said, a claim denied by a representative of the school.

• Biden and his family are corrupt.

Author Peter Schweizer, in his book, “Profiles in Corruption,” states that Biden is the most corrupt vice president ever. He speaks of “the Biden five,” comprised of son Hunter, younger brothers James and Frank, sister Valerie and daughter Ashley. Through a complicated tangle of taxpayer-funded loans and grants, business dealings and consulting fees, these five family members received millions of dollars, cashing in during the Obama administration. 

• Biden and his vice-presidential candidate, Kamala Harris, refuse to state if they will pack the Supreme Court. 

In 1983, Biden said that FDR’s attempt to pack SCOTUS was “a bone-head (sic) idea” and a “terrible, terrible mistake to make.” Even the late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg was opposed to packing the court. Now, Biden states that voters don’t deserve to know what he will do. During the primaries, Harris said, “I am open to increasing the number of people on the Supreme Court.” 

• Biden foments violence. 

As Antifa riots, burns and destroys our cities, and bullies citizens, Biden stated that Antifa is just “an idea.” (No, Joe, that’s the tooth fairy.) He finally denounced the riots on August 31, while our major cities were looted and destroyed. In fact, staffers for Biden and Harris bailed out an alleged child abuser through the Minnesota Freedom Fund. 

• Biden wants to remove all borders and have U.S. taxpayers pay for healthcare for all illegals. What could go wrong?

• Biden wants to enact the Green New Deal, which would essentially ban the internal combustion engine, impede air travel and basically eradicate natural gas for more expensive renewables. 

• Biden called our troops “stupid bastards.” Trump’s alleged comments about “suckers” and “losers” have been discounted, even by Trump hater John Bolton, who was with Trump when he was supposed to say this. 

• Biden is “mentally deteriorating,” says Democratic strategist Justin Horwitz. His “gaffes clearly indicate that he is not all there anymore.” Democrats are well aware that a Socialist cannot win the presidency, but a “moderate” could win, then step down and let radicals run the country. 

These extremists are not your parents’ Democrat party. No, these new Dems are militant Marxists who want to destroy America and its Constitution. Our country is at a crossroads. Will we choose to live in “the last best hope of earth” (Abraham Lincoln) or a reincarnation of Venezuela? 

Sunday, June 28, 2020

A mother's thoughts

"Like the dawn of a new day is the miracle of birth, bright with hope and colored by tomorrow’s dreams."
Donna Volmerding, on the birth of her son, October 13, 1974
"More wondrous than the universe at twilight is the miracle of birth. When we gaze in awe at the workings of the Lord, we realize how little a role we play in them."
Donna Volmerding, on the birth of her daughter, June 26, 1977

Columnist misleads on scientist's critics

This article appeared in the Sunday, May 31, 2020, issue of The Journal Gazette.

Michael Gerson’s article, “The right’s sick parody of populism,” is filled with half-truths, fabrications and vitriol. He states that “the right has turned hard against science and expertise.” 
Perhaps, but I have questions. Does the left believe, as settled science, that preborns are indeed human life, possessing all necessary human DNA that is separate from its mother’s, and is not just a cluster of cells? Does the left dismiss hard science about male and female chromosomes, and choose to believe that gender is only what we want it to be?
Gerson states that “Tucker Carlson questions whether Anthony S. Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, is ‘right about the science.’” 
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., the only U.S. senator to have had a confirmed case of COVID-19 who also is a physician, asked Fauci about the science on the other side, stating that the public-health response to the pandemic has been riddled with “wrong prediction after wrong prediction.”
Carlson proved this, pointing out several wrong or misleading statements made by Fauci, including this one in March — Right now in the United States, people should not be walking around with masks. … there’s no reason to be walking around with a mask.” 
Concerning COVID-19, Fauci stated in January that “we need to take it seriously and do the kinds of things that the CDC and the Department of Homeland Security are doing. But this is not a major threat for the people in the United States, and this is not something that the citizens of the United States right now should be worried about.”
Fauci even stated that it was fine to have sex with strangers met on Internet dating apps but also said that “nobody should ever shake hands again, just to be safe.”
After calling President Trump a “proven and perpetual liar,” Gerson states that Carlson called Fauci a “buffoon.” In truth, Carlson said, “This is just buffoon-level stuff …, and we’re not doing this to mock the guy (Fauci). … (But) is this the guy into whom you want to vest all of your trust? Is this the guy you want to chart the future of the country?” 
Gerson clearly is not being honest about what Carlson said, nor is his harsh assessment about millions of intelligent, compassionate citizens who value freedom. 
Does this make Gerson a proven and perpetual liar?


Friday, April 27, 2018

Lewis and the Third Commandment


This article was published in Indiana Policy Review, November 2, 2016
On C.S. Lewis and his meditation on the Third Commandment
By Donna Volmerding
Particularly in this election year, Christians are having discussions about the candidate whom they think is the better one, and the philosophy and ideology that they believe is best for America and shows God’s love the best.
In C.S. Lewis’ Meditation on the Third Commandment, he discussed the “growing desire for a Christian ‘party,’ a Christian ‘front’ or a Christian ‘platform’ in politics.”
He expounds by saying “Nearly all parties agree in professing ends which we admit to be desirable — security, a living wage, and the best adjustment between the claims of order and freedom. What distinguishes one party from another is the championship of means. We do not dispute whether the citizens are to be made happy, but whether an egalitarian or a hierarchical State, whether capitalism or socialism, whether despotism or democracy is most likely to make them so.”
We do not have a Christian party in America, and most Americans would not want one. (I haven’t found anyone who would.) First, our kingdom is not of this world. While we certainly are commanded to make this world as good as we can for ourselves, our families and our neighbors, it is not the final resting place for Christians. It is a stepping-off point.
Second, there is so much disagreement among Christians about what ideology and/or system of government truly serves God’s ends the best. As Lewis stated, some Christians believe that no one can be trusted with more than minimum power over others, some that an authoritarian state better promotes the Christian life, and some demand a Left revolution and redistribution of wealth.
Third, our Constitution was wisely based on a government with deep Christian influence and thought but one that allows freedom of religion. The First Amendment states that “Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.”
Political science professors at the University of Houston collected 15,000 writings from the founding era, isolating 3,154 direct quotes made by the Founding Fathers. This is the breakdown of the source of those quotes: Baron Charles de Montesquieu, 8.3 percent; Sir William Blackstone, 7.9 percent; and John Locke, 2.9 percent. Most interestingly, the researchers discovered that the Founding Fathers quoted directly from the Bible 34 percent of the time. Blackstone, a brilliant 18th-century English judge, author, professor and lecturer of law at Oxford University, used the Bible to arrive at his conclusions.
These are quotes from our Founding Fathers:
• Benjamin Franklin:
“The longer I live, the more convincing proofs I see of this truth: ‘that God governs in the affairs of men.’ And if a sparrow cannot fall to the ground without His notice, is it probable that an empire can rise without His aid?” (June 28, 1787, at the Constitutional Convention when the delegates were deadlocked)
“Freedom is not a gift bestowed upon us by other men, but a right that belongs to us by the laws of God and nature.”
• George Washington:
“Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports. … Reason and experience both forbid us to expect that national morality can prevail in exclusion of religious principle. … It is impossible to govern rightly without God and the Bible.”
• John Adams:
“Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.”
• James Madison:
“We have staked the future of all of our political institutions … upon the capacity of each and all of us to govern ourselves, to control ourselves, to sustain ourselves according to the Ten Commandments of God.”
In 1800, Congress approved the use of the Capitol as a church building for Christian worship services. As president, Thomas Jefferson attended these services and employed the military band to play for them, at taxpayer expense.
John Quincy Adams said, “The highest glory of the American Revolution was this: that it connected in one indissoluble bond the principles of Christianity with the principles of civil government.”
The influence of Scripture is evident in the Supreme Court building, the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial, the Jefferson Memorial, the Capitol Building and the Library of Congress.
Author Jerry Newcombe says that “Without exception, the constitutions of all 50 states refer to ‘the Almighty God of the universe, the Author and Sustainer of our liberty.’”
Almost every Ivy League school was established primarily to train ministers of the gospel. Harvard College’s first presidents insisted that there could be no true knowledge or wisdom without Jesus Christ.
In 1892, the Supreme Court stated that “Our lives and our institutions must necessarily be based upon and embody the teachings of the Redeemer of mankind. It is impossible that it should be otherwise … our civilization and our institutions are emphatically Christian … This is a religious people … this is a Christian nation.” (Holy Trinity Church vs. U.S.)
Because of their understanding of the Bible and laws based on Judeo-Christian principles, our Founding Fathers gave us several invaluable gifts — a comprehension of the importance of limited government because of man’s fallibility, laws based on a wise understanding of Who gives us our freedoms, and the right of conscience with freedom of religion.
Can there be any doubt, even among those who profess a strong central government as the ideal, that our Constitution gave us the greatest, richest, most free, most powerful nation that ever existed? It is certainly one that has been exceedingly blessed by God. It would be a travesty to deny the wisdom and discernment of the Founding Fathers and trample the documents they produced.
As C.S. Lewis explained, “By the natural light He has shown us what means are lawful: to find out which one is efficacious He has given us brains. The rest He has left to us.”
Donna Volmerding, a member of the Indiana Policy Review Foundation, is editor of The Fort Wayne Lutheran newspaper.

Monday, July 3, 2017

The Fragrance of Mercy


Want to read a good book? “The Fragrance of Mercy” is an adult Christian mystery that plumbs the process of forgiveness in all of its aspects. Forgiveness is ultimately experienced as a gift of God and His grace, for our healing, our strength and our ultimate joy. I pray that you will enjoy this book and that it will be meaningful in your life.

The book thread is
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Monday, January 16, 2017

Are we haters?


By Donna Volmerding
I loved to watch the TV show “Little House on the Prairie.” The Ingalls family, who were excellent role models, were sometimes opposed by the dysfunctional Oleson family — in particular, Nellie. Years later, the Olesons adopted Nancy, a girl who made Nellie look like a choir girl.
Whenever Nancy did something hateful or malicious and got caught, her quick response was “You hate me!” I would roll my eyes and say to myself “Puhleeeeze.”
In today’s politically correct climate, I often feel the same way about hot-topic discussions. You don’t agree with gay marriage? You hate. You didn’t vote for Hillary? You hate. You don’t believe in open borders? You hate.
Thoughtful, informed, reasonable discussion is shut down. You are labeled a bigot, homophobe, misogynist, xenophobe, sexist, fascist, blah, blah, blah. You are in a basket of deplorables, irredeemable, in fact.
If you have any beliefs other than what the radical left deems appropriate, you’re a hater. Your speech is mean and hurts others feelings; therefore, you are denied your First Amendment right to free speech.
It isn’t that the left needs to hone its message. The problem is, lefties don’t have a message other than to demean those who disagree with them. When they are asked probing, serious questions from those who seek understanding, the kneejerk response is “You hate!”
My eyes roll, and I say to myself “Puhleeeeze.”

Thursday, November 3, 2016

Abortion: The courts, the judges and the lies that bind


This article was first published in the May 2004 issue of The Fort Wayne Lutheran
By Donna Volmerding
Our Founding Fathers believed that we are endowed by our Creator with certain inalienable rights. This is the foundation of our government — that our rights are bestowed by God, not by the state.
Our Founding Fathers set up a system of government with three equal branches, performing separate tasks and duties but answerable to the people. When judges and courts make laws that circumvent the constitutional process, we all suffer, our system of government suffers, and justice and righteousness are too often ignored.
In 1973, the Supreme Court ruled that each woman had a right to abort her unborn child, for no more compelling reason than she just didn’t want to have a baby. The court ruling, Roe vs. Wade, discovered (after 200 years!) a previously unrecognized “right to privacy.” But there’s more to this story that must be told.
Norma McCorvey, the defendant “Roe,” has publicly stated that her entire case was built on lies and fabrications, falsehoods known to her lawyer at the time of trial. McCorvey was a 21-year-old carnival worker who, at the time, was pregnant with her third child.
According to defense arguments for Roe vs. Wade, “Roe” was raped and did not want to bear her child. McCorvey confesses that she was not raped, and she ended up placing her child for adoption.
Eventually, McCorvey joined with anti-abortion activists in 1994 to have Roe vs. Wade overturned. She cited what she termed as more than 30 years of evidence that abortions are psychologically harmful to women.
Sandra Cano, the Doe in Doe vs. Bolton, a companion case to Roe that instituted partial-birth abortion, also has publicly attested to the deception perpetrated in her trial.
“My case was based upon a fraud upon the court,” Cano said. “I did not want abortion. I would not want to kill babies. Partial-birth abortion is wrong, and it should be called murder since they are killing the baby with part of its body already outside the mother’s womb. It is murder, in my opinion.”
Bernard Nathanson, M.D., co-founder of the pro-abortion group NARAL, “served as chairman of the executive committee of NARAL (the National Association for the Repeal of Abortion Laws, and later renamed the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League) as well as its medical committee,” stated the December 2002 issue of Whistleblower magazine. Nathanson was one of the principal architects and strategists of the abortion movement in the United States, the article said.
He tells an astonishing story.
“In 1968 I met Lawrence Lader,” Nathanson said. “Lader had just finished a book called ‘Abortion,’ and in it had made the audacious demand that abortion should be legalized throughout the country.
“I had just finished a residency in obstetrics and gynecology and was impressed with the number of women who were coming into clinics, wards and hospitals suffering from illegal, infected, botched abortions.
“Lader and I were perfect for each other. We sat down and plotted out the organization now known as NARAL. With Betty Friedan, we set up this organization and began working on the strategy.
“We persuaded the media that the cause of permissive abortion was a liberal, enlightened, sophisticated one,” Nathanson said. “Knowing that if a true poll were taken, we would be soundly defeated, we simply fabricated the results of fictional polls.
“We announced to the media that we had taken polls and that 60% of Americans were in favor of permissive abortion. This is the tactic of the self-fulfilling lie. Few people care to be in the minority. We aroused enough sympathy to sell our program of permissive abortion by fabricating the number of illegal abortions done annually in the U.S. The actual figure was approaching 100,000, but the figure we gave to the media repeatedly was 1,000,000.
“Repeating the big lie often enough convinces the public,” Nathanson said. “The number of women dying from illegal abortions was around 200-250 annually. The figure we constantly fed to the media was 10,000. These false figures took root in the consciousness of Americans, convincing many that we needed to crack the abortion law.
“Another myth we fed to the public through the media was that legalizing abortion would only mean that the abortions taking place illegally would then be done legally. In fact, of course, abortion is now being used as a primary method of birth control in the U.S., and the annual number of abortions has increased by 1,500% since legalization,” he said.
If a democratic process had been followed in these decisions, in which all sides can be heard, facts checked, volatile subjects discussed with cool heads and moral sensibilities, these miscarriages of justice may not have occurred.
But when these issues are taken out of the governance of the people by courts and federal judges, “vitally important cultural issues are now decided for us by a handful of unelected elites,” said columnist Ann Coulter. “It’s a lot easier to get a majority out of nine votes than it is to get a majority of 280 million votes.” (The U.S. population is now about 320 million.)
It is imperative that all of us are aware of the lies, half-truths and misconceptions that deeply harm our country and the spirit of our people. We have the honor and the privilege to live in the greatest nation on earth. Let’s not allow her to be destroyed by the enemy within.