Liberals at Yuletide

“And So This Is Christmas,” released as “Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” in 1972, is a Beatles Christmas classic.  I enjoy a lot of Beatles songs, but this one has always been a problem for me.  Voted the most popular Christmas song in Britain time and again, to me it seems a sarcastic and small-minded attack on Christmas and on the ordinary people who derive so much meaning from it.  It is typical of John Lennon’s and Yoko Ono’s alienation from the ordinary working people whom Lennon grew up with.

In this way, Lennon was not at all different from other liberal celebs.  His views on life were the same as those of most hypocritical left-wingers from Hollywood to Kensington to Manhattan’s Upper East Side, where Lennon was assassinated in December 1980.  Millionaires all, they decry the evils of capitalism and preach poverty for others.  These are the celebrity atheists, thousands of them, who will never utter “Merry Christmas” or speak of the “real meaning of Christmas.”

For these liberals, it’s just not cool to say “Merry Christmas” because Christmas marks the birth of Christ, and if there’s one thing liberals agree on, it’s that Christianity must be driven out of the public arena.  Not Islam, not Buddhism, not Kwanzaa, but Christianity.  The faith of 245 million Americans must be suppressed because liberals judge it to be a repressive religion with a past (and present) of intolerance and domination.   

Lennon himself was, for a time, keenly interested in the message of Christ, going so far as to watch videos of Billy Graham, Pat Robertson, and Oral Roberts, with whom Lennon corresponded when he sought a way out of the drug-addicted mess of his life.  Unfortunately, he could never come to terms with what he felt was the “uptight” and hypocritical behavior of many believers.  As Jesse Carey wrote on CBN.com, “it was Christians who made him not want to be part of the church.”

Like many liberals, Lennon turned from Christianity to universalism, a pseudo-religious moral code based partly on Christianity but drained of all Christian and other specifically religious references.  If Lennon’s “religion” was actually derived from Christianity, why should he go out of his way to mock Christmas and Christians, as he often did throughout his life (as when he appeared to do when he famously announced in 1966 that the Beatles were “bigger than Jesus”)?  If there is so little difference in moral perspectives — if in fact universalism is in some respects similar to Christianity — why should liberals be so disdainful of Christian faith (as Obama was when he mocked conservatives clinging to their “guns or religion”?

The answer is that it is not just a moral distinction, though there is that, that drives liberal disdain — it is a fierce desire to maintain a social distinction wherein liberals believe themselves to be intellectually and culturally superior to conservatives.  The central appeal of liberalism is the sense of superiority it confers on its followers, no matter how hollow its basis.  The appeal of liberalism is to know, indisputably and at every moment of one’s life, that you, as a liberal, are better than those mindless ordinary persons that you grew up with.

The joke is on liberals, of course.  They are the ones who are unreflective in having so easily dismissed thousands of years of spiritual and moral wisdom in favor of a flimsy and misguided version of the truth.  The wise man is the one who has thought deeply about the civilization into which he has been born and who understands how much of value exists in that tradition.  Is it likely that I, as one individual, possess more wisdom than all of the great minds of the past?  Or even that my generation, those of us inhabiting this planet at the end of 2019, know more than did all of the generations that preceded us?

That, in effect, is what liberals are telling us, and it is why they insist on suppressing the traditional faith of ordinary believers.  Despite the superficial arguments of “scientific” atheists like Richard Dawkins (“you can’t see God, so he doesn’t exist”), the true intellectual is the person who lives his life according to a stable and widely shared faith in a benevolent God.  That person would not have to write Oral Roberts pleading for help (“I want out of hell,” Lennon wrote).

There are countless liberals who also live in the midst of broken marriages, drug and alcohol addiction, and hopeless lives and who also want “out of hell,” but they are too proud to admit it.  What stands in their way is a refusal to abandon their sense of superiority.  They simply cannot survive without that constant assurance that they are better than the common man who lives with his faith in God, family, and country.

That faith is what liberals wish to tear down, at Christmastime and all year long.  It is why liberals like Lennon, who soon abandoned his quest for Christian faith, could sing in such a disdainful and self-assured manner of a world that is “wrong,” filled with income inequality, racism, and hypocritical Christians celebrating Christmas.

That is the same message as in Lennon’s even better known song “Imagine,” the unofficial anthem of liberals everywhere.  What Lennon seeks is a “perfect” world with no belief in God or afterlife, no love of country, no “possessions” — in other words, a world of atheism, universalism, and communism.

While some liberals — I’m thinking of Joe Biden and Mayor Pete — are coy about admitting it, that is the godless, egalitarian world that liberals have sought for over a century now.  Biden and Buttigieg are just as much a part of the liberal tradition as are Marx, Stalin, and Castro, all of whom were known for supporting the brutal suppression of Christianity.      

During this “holiday season,” I greet my friends with a hearty “Merry Christmas,” as natural and unaffected a greeting as “good morning” or “how are you?,” and most of them respond with something like “Merry Christmas to you!”  I find that comforting, because beneath that simple exchange lies an acknowledgment of the ancient civilization we live in and of its shared love, faith, and protection, not just for believers, but for all human beings.

I offer that greeting even to my liberal friends, not to force my faith on them, but as a humble gesture of goodwill.  Who knows?  Maybe someday one of them will drop his pretentions and respond, “Merry Christmas to you, too!”  That would make my Christmas complete.

Jeffrey Folks is the author of many books and articles on American culture including Heartland of the Imagination (2011).

“And So This Is Christmas,” released as “Happy Xmas (War Is Over)” in 1972, is a Beatles Christmas classic.  I enjoy a lot of Beatles songs, but this one has always been a problem for me.  Voted the most popular Christmas song in Britain time and again, to me it seems a sarcastic and small-minded attack on Christmas and on the ordinary people who derive so much meaning from it.  It is typical of John Lennon’s and Yoko Ono’s alienation from the ordinary working people whom Lennon grew up with.

In this way, Lennon was not at all different from other liberal celebs.  His views on life were the same as those of most hypocritical left-wingers from Hollywood to Kensington to Manhattan’s Upper East Side, where Lennon was assassinated in December 1980.  Millionaires all, they decry the evils of capitalism and preach poverty for others.  These are the celebrity atheists, thousands of them, who will never utter “Merry Christmas” or speak of the “real meaning of Christmas.”

For these liberals, it’s just not cool to say “Merry Christmas” because Christmas marks the birth of Christ, and if there’s one thing liberals agree on, it’s that Christianity must be driven out of the public arena.  Not Islam, not Buddhism, not Kwanzaa, but Christianity.  The faith of 245 million Americans must be suppressed because liberals judge it to be a repressive religion with a past (and present) of intolerance and domination.   

Lennon himself was, for a time, keenly interested in the message of Christ, going so far as to watch videos of Billy Graham, Pat Robertson, and Oral Roberts, with whom Lennon corresponded when he sought a way out of the drug-addicted mess of his life.  Unfortunately, he could never come to terms with what he felt was the “uptight” and hypocritical behavior of many believers.  As Jesse Carey wrote on CBN.com, “it was Christians who made him not want to be part of the church.”

Like many liberals, Lennon turned from Christianity to universalism, a pseudo-religious moral code based partly on Christianity but drained of all Christian and other specifically religious references.  If Lennon’s “religion” was actually derived from Christianity, why should he go out of his way to mock Christmas and Christians, as he often did throughout his life (as when he appeared to do when he famously announced in 1966 that the Beatles were “bigger than Jesus”)?  If there is so little difference in moral perspectives — if in fact universalism is in some respects similar to Christianity — why should liberals be so disdainful of Christian faith (as Obama was when he mocked conservatives clinging to their “guns or religion”?

The answer is that it is not just a moral distinction, though there is that, that drives liberal disdain — it is a fierce desire to maintain a social distinction wherein liberals believe themselves to be intellectually and culturally superior to conservatives.  The central appeal of liberalism is the sense of superiority it confers on its followers, no matter how hollow its basis.  The appeal of liberalism is to know, indisputably and at every moment of one’s life, that you, as a liberal, are better than those mindless ordinary persons that you grew up with.

The joke is on liberals, of course.  They are the ones who are unreflective in having so easily dismissed thousands of years of spiritual and moral wisdom in favor of a flimsy and misguided version of the truth.  The wise man is the one who has thought deeply about the civilization into which he has been born and who understands how much of value exists in that tradition.  Is it likely that I, as one individual, possess more wisdom than all of the great minds of the past?  Or even that my generation, those of us inhabiting this planet at the end of 2019, know more than did all of the generations that preceded us?

That, in effect, is what liberals are telling us, and it is why they insist on suppressing the traditional faith of ordinary believers.  Despite the superficial arguments of “scientific” atheists like Richard Dawkins (“you can’t see God, so he doesn’t exist”), the true intellectual is the person who lives his life according to a stable and widely shared faith in a benevolent God.  That person would not have to write Oral Roberts pleading for help (“I want out of hell,” Lennon wrote).

There are countless liberals who also live in the midst of broken marriages, drug and alcohol addiction, and hopeless lives and who also want “out of hell,” but they are too proud to admit it.  What stands in their way is a refusal to abandon their sense of superiority.  They simply cannot survive without that constant assurance that they are better than the common man who lives with his faith in God, family, and country.

That faith is what liberals wish to tear down, at Christmastime and all year long.  It is why liberals like Lennon, who soon abandoned his quest for Christian faith, could sing in such a disdainful and self-assured manner of a world that is “wrong,” filled with income inequality, racism, and hypocritical Christians celebrating Christmas.

That is the same message as in Lennon’s even better known song “Imagine,” the unofficial anthem of liberals everywhere.  What Lennon seeks is a “perfect” world with no belief in God or afterlife, no love of country, no “possessions” — in other words, a world of atheism, universalism, and communism.

While some liberals — I’m thinking of Joe Biden and Mayor Pete — are coy about admitting it, that is the godless, egalitarian world that liberals have sought for over a century now.  Biden and Buttigieg are just as much a part of the liberal tradition as are Marx, Stalin, and Castro, all of whom were known for supporting the brutal suppression of Christianity.      

During this “holiday season,” I greet my friends with a hearty “Merry Christmas,” as natural and unaffected a greeting as “good morning” or “how are you?,” and most of them respond with something like “Merry Christmas to you!”  I find that comforting, because beneath that simple exchange lies an acknowledgment of the ancient civilization we live in and of its shared love, faith, and protection, not just for believers, but for all human beings.

I offer that greeting even to my liberal friends, not to force my faith on them, but as a humble gesture of goodwill.  Who knows?  Maybe someday one of them will drop his pretentions and respond, “Merry Christmas to you, too!”  That would make my Christmas complete.

Jeffrey Folks is the author of many books and articles on American culture including Heartland of the Imagination (2011).

via American Thinker

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Dershowitz Meets Trump At Christmas Dinner, Fueling Speculation Of Joining Trump’s Legal Team

Tiesday night, famed attorney Alan Dershowitz met President Trump at Trump’s annual Christmas Eve dinner in the ballroom at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago estate, fueling more speculation that he may join Trump’s legal team, which is dealing with the impeachment proceedings against the president. As The Daily Mail reported, “Trump got up from his table, where he was seated next to first lady Melania Trump, to walk over and talk to Dershowitz after reports his legal team has discussed bringing Dershowitz on board to help with the president’s impeachment trial in the Senate.

When The Daily Mail queried him about his appearance, Dershowitz responded, “I was a guest of friends of mine. Not part of the Trump Christmas party. The president came over to say hello to me and my wife. We wished each other happy holidays.”

In May, Dershowitz contributed an opinion piece at The Hill, in which he defended Trump’s comments in which he stated that if he were indeed impeached by the House, he might “head to the Supreme Court.” Dershowitz wrote:

Two former, well-respected justices of the Supreme Court first suggested that the judiciary may indeed have a role in reining in Congress were it to exceed its constitutional authority. Justice Byron White, a John F. Kennedy appointee, put it this way: “Finally, as applied to the special case of the President, the majority argument merely points out that, were the Senate to convict the President without any kind of trial, a Constitutional crisis might well result. It hardly follows that the Court ought to refrain from upholding the Constitution in all impeachment cases. Nor does it follow that, in cases of presidential impeachment, the Justices ought to abandon their constitutional responsibility because the Senate has precipitated a crisis.”

Justice David Souter, a George H. W. Bush appointee, echoed his predecessor: “If the Senate were to act in a manner seriously threatening the integrity of its results … judicial interference might well be appropriate.”

Dershowitz continued:

It is not too much of a stretch from the kind of constitutional crises imagined by these learned justices to a crisis caused by a Congress that impeached a president without evidence of “high crimes and misdemeanors.” The president is not above the law, but neither is Congress, whose members take an oath to support, not subvert, the Constitution. And that Constitution does not authorize impeachment for anything short of high crimes and misdemeanors.  Were Congress to try to impeach and remove a president without alleging and proving any such crime, and were the president to refuse to leave office on the ground that Congress had acted unconstitutionally, there would indeed be such a constitutional crisis. And Supreme Court precedent going back to Marbury v. Madison empowers the justices to resolve conflicts between the executive and legislative branches by applying the Constitution as the supreme law of the land.

Dershowitz noted, “No one should criticize President Trump for raising the possibility of Supreme Court review, especially following Bush v. Gore,  the case that ended the 2000 election. Many of the same academics ridiculed the notion that the justices would enter the political thicket of vote-counting. But they did and, in the process, weakened the “political question” doctrine.”

 

via The Daily Wire

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Jesus wasn’t very nice

Jesus wasn’t nice, and I can say this with absolute certainty.  Therefore, I get disgusted when I see a lot of churches and preachers trying to emasculate the teachings of Christ into a simple “just be nice” doctrine.  When a Christian dares deviate from this, liberals pounce and call someone’s faith into question, as we saw last week with Christianity Today’s attack on President Trump.  That is a deep perversion of the truth and the Lion of Judah’s message.

Nice people don’t make enemies, and Jesus Christ had enemies in excess.  King Herod believed an infant Jesus to be a usurper.  The Pharisees hated Jesus since His teachings often contradicted their actions.  Because cancel culture was also a thing in the first century, the Pharisees ultimately saw their popularity plummet and wanted revenge.  The Romans wanted punishment for calling Himself a King while the Jews called for his crucifixion because He was nicknamed the Son of God.

Even today, Jesus is attacked.  Democrats like Speaker Pelosi claim to be Catholic while their own policies like abortions and failing to prosecute criminals go against the core of His teachings.  It’s no wonder the vast majority of atheists vote Democrat.  If He were alive today, I have no doubts that modern liberals would boycott Him.

“After these things Jesus was walking in Galilee, for He was unwilling to walk in Judea because the Jews were seeking to kill Him.” —John 7:1.

Today, spineless bishops use passionless sermons to preach about acceptance and forgiveness.  Sure, these teachings undoubtedly have a place.  With that said, in churches all across the U.S, you’ll be hard pressed to hear anything about the moral teachings that matter like conversion, virtue, and sexual morality.  On the off-chance that you do, they’re minimalized and said nicely so that these good Christians can appear to be non-confrontational.  God forbid.

Take for instance this other Christianity Today article on the increasing visibility of the LGBT community and what that means for Christians.  Their take?  We’re all “queer”:

Is there an easy way out of the current battles over sexuality?  No.  But there is a way through.  A remnant, perhaps small and perhaps substantial, will continue to teach that we are created male and female, to bless the marriages that reunite those two broken halves, and to remind all, married and unmarried, that ‘in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are given in marriage’ — Along the way, we all will be queer[.] 

Then we have the case of Adolfo Martinez, an Iowan who took a gay flag hanging on a Church of Christ and then burned it.  He has been sentenced to 15 years in prison.  ”It was an honor to do that,” Martinez told KCCI.  ”It’s a blessing from the Lord to be able to stand for his world firmly, against all odds.”

Meanwhile, we’re celebrating the one-year anniversary of a Satanic statue put up at an Illinois statehouse.

When someone like Adolfo Martinez is so severely punished, it makes the rapid decline in Christian observance and church attendance understandable.  What motivations do Christians have when those tasked with looking over the flock don’t seem to care whether or not they’re saving anyone from eternal Hell, let alone our rights on Earth?

“Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth.” —Matthew 5:5

The meek remain one of the most misunderstood concepts in the Bible.  Some Christians mistakenly assume that it means quiet and submissive; however, it is anything but.  Edward Fesser, an esteemed modern philosopher, writes:  

When Christ said, “Blessed are the meek,” He was using a military term[.] … Strength under control. Power under authority. Formidable determination in the face of the constant onslaughts of the enemy. The humble willingness to do what your Master commands you to do.

The exact opposite of feeble timidity.

Did Christ show mercy and tenderness?  Of course, but those characteristics are already overstated. “Be nice” has become quite a false idol of comfort.  Jesus also had convictions and a faith that He was willing to, and did, die for.

That is the essence of virtue that is lost when Christians (especially their leaders) submit to social justice.  It doesn’t mean that every Christian should be preoccupied with righting every wrong.  Seeing someone cut in line at Macy’s during the Christmas shopping season could probably be ignored.  But when ostentatious Hollywood liberals attack you for attending church and following a faith that they deem an “anti-LGBT hate group,” it is righteous to hit back.  Like Jesus, carry a big sword but know when to unsheathe it.  

“Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword.” —Matthew 10:34

Merry Christmas!

Image: Ed Uthman via Flickr.

Jesus wasn’t nice, and I can say this with absolute certainty.  Therefore, I get disgusted when I see a lot of churches and preachers trying to emasculate the teachings of Christ into a simple “just be nice” doctrine.  When a Christian dares deviate from this, liberals pounce and call someone’s faith into question, as we saw last week with Christianity Today’s attack on President Trump.  That is a deep perversion of the truth and the Lion of Judah’s message.

Nice people don’t make enemies, and Jesus Christ had enemies in excess.  King Herod believed an infant Jesus to be a usurper.  The Pharisees hated Jesus since His teachings often contradicted their actions.  Because cancel culture was also a thing in the first century, the Pharisees ultimately saw their popularity plummet and wanted revenge.  The Romans wanted punishment for calling Himself a King while the Jews called for his crucifixion because He was nicknamed the Son of God.

Even today, Jesus is attacked.  Democrats like Speaker Pelosi claim to be Catholic while their own policies like abortions and failing to prosecute criminals go against the core of His teachings.  It’s no wonder the vast majority of atheists vote Democrat.  If He were alive today, I have no doubts that modern liberals would boycott Him.

“After these things Jesus was walking in Galilee, for He was unwilling to walk in Judea because the Jews were seeking to kill Him.” —John 7:1.

Today, spineless bishops use passionless sermons to preach about acceptance and forgiveness.  Sure, these teachings undoubtedly have a place.  With that said, in churches all across the U.S, you’ll be hard pressed to hear anything about the moral teachings that matter like conversion, virtue, and sexual morality.  On the off-chance that you do, they’re minimalized and said nicely so that these good Christians can appear to be non-confrontational.  God forbid.

Take for instance this other Christianity Today article on the increasing visibility of the LGBT community and what that means for Christians.  Their take?  We’re all “queer”:

Is there an easy way out of the current battles over sexuality?  No.  But there is a way through.  A remnant, perhaps small and perhaps substantial, will continue to teach that we are created male and female, to bless the marriages that reunite those two broken halves, and to remind all, married and unmarried, that ‘in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are given in marriage’ — Along the way, we all will be queer[.] 

Then we have the case of Adolfo Martinez, an Iowan who took a gay flag hanging on a Church of Christ and then burned it.  He has been sentenced to 15 years in prison.  ”It was an honor to do that,” Martinez told KCCI.  ”It’s a blessing from the Lord to be able to stand for his world firmly, against all odds.”

Meanwhile, we’re celebrating the one-year anniversary of a Satanic statue put up at an Illinois statehouse.

When someone like Adolfo Martinez is so severely punished, it makes the rapid decline in Christian observance and church attendance understandable.  What motivations do Christians have when those tasked with looking over the flock don’t seem to care whether or not they’re saving anyone from eternal Hell, let alone our rights on Earth?

“Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the earth.” —Matthew 5:5

The meek remain one of the most misunderstood concepts in the Bible.  Some Christians mistakenly assume that it means quiet and submissive; however, it is anything but.  Edward Fesser, an esteemed modern philosopher, writes:  

When Christ said, “Blessed are the meek,” He was using a military term[.] … Strength under control. Power under authority. Formidable determination in the face of the constant onslaughts of the enemy. The humble willingness to do what your Master commands you to do.

The exact opposite of feeble timidity.

Did Christ show mercy and tenderness?  Of course, but those characteristics are already overstated. “Be nice” has become quite a false idol of comfort.  Jesus also had convictions and a faith that He was willing to, and did, die for.

That is the essence of virtue that is lost when Christians (especially their leaders) submit to social justice.  It doesn’t mean that every Christian should be preoccupied with righting every wrong.  Seeing someone cut in line at Macy’s during the Christmas shopping season could probably be ignored.  But when ostentatious Hollywood liberals attack you for attending church and following a faith that they deem an “anti-LGBT hate group,” it is righteous to hit back.  Like Jesus, carry a big sword but know when to unsheathe it.  

“Do not think that I have come to bring peace to the earth. I have not come to bring peace, but a sword.” —Matthew 10:34

Merry Christmas!

Image: Ed Uthman via Flickr.

via American Thinker Blog

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“As Prime Minister That Is Something I Want to Change” – In His Christmas Message Prime Minister Boris Johnson Defends Persecuted Christians

In his first Christmas message to the country, Prime Minister Boris Johnson addressed the global persecution of Christians. Johnson promised those persecuted Christians that Great Britain under his leadership will defend their right to practice their faith.

It’s great to have a real UK leader in charge again.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson: Today of all days, I want us to remember those Christians around the world who are facing persecution. For them Christmas day will be marked in private, in secret, perhaps even in a prison cell. As Prime Minister, that is something I want to change. We stand with Christians everywhere, in solidarity, and will defend your right to practice your faith. So as a country let us reflect on the year, and celebrate the good that is to come.

Via Katie Hopkins:

The post “As Prime Minister That Is Something I Want to Change” – In His Christmas Message Prime Minister Boris Johnson Defends Persecuted Christians appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

via The Gateway Pundit

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Trump’s Economy: Super Saturday Recorded Highest Sales Of Any Day In U.S. History

More evidence of the strong U.S. economy during the Trump administration came over last weekend, as sales across the country on Saturday reached the highest level ever recorded.

Bloomberg reported, “Holiday shopping set records over the weekend, with Super Saturday sales reaching $34.4 billion, the biggest single day in U.S. retail history, according to Customer Growth Partners.” Craig Johnson, president of Customer Growth Partners, credited job growth and the abundance of disposable income for the record-setting day, adding, “Paced by the ‘Big Four’ mega-retailers — Walmart, Amazon, Costco and Target — Super Saturday was boosted by the best traffic our team has seen in years.”

Johnson noted that 58% of the increase in sales could be attributed to sales online. On Black Friday 2019, the day after Thanksgiving, the nation recorded

$31.2 billion; on Saturday, December 14, the level reached $28.1 billion, and Cyber Monday, the Monday after Thanksgiving, the level of sales reached $19.1 billion.

Johnson said that less people visited malls over the weekend but the ones who did were more likely to actually purchase items rather than simply window-shopping. CNN offered an explanation for the downturn in mall shopping:

Today’s consumers are also drawn to the street retail experience that the suburban mall, ironically enough, helped drive into decline. Historic Main Street retail corridors are seeing something of a renaissance. Across the top 30 US metro areas, retail space in these walkable urban laces commands an astounding 83% rent premium over regional averages — an increase of 17% since 2010 … Even big-box retailers, such as Walmart and Target, are adapting to this competitive reality by building smaller urban store formats. In fact, growth in digital shopping is actually promoting retail growth in some locations — such as dense residential areas — due to a positive “halo effect” where online sales increase in neighborhoods where the retailer has a brick-and-mortar presence.

John Sexton of HotAir commented, “I can see this playing out where I live here in southern California. The nearest traditional mall was booming 20 years ago (Sears and Macy’s were anchor stores) but by 2010 it was on the decline and often had a lot of vacant space. Sears finally closed about a year ago. Now a significant portion of the lower level of that mall has been taken over by a massive Dave and Busters style restaurant for kids which features a large arcade and full size amusement rides. Upstairs is an equally large trampoline park.”

Michael Greenberg, the CEO of Retina, told Yahoo News, “I think what we’re going to see is a shift toward this concept of lifetime value; it’s something that’s already been realized in more traditional industries, like airlines, and now retailers are starting to realize they have predictive power as well. So people are no longer that first purchase, but really that lifetime relationship with the business … I do think it’s going to become mission-critical in the year ahead where you cannot acquire a customer unless you know a priori what they’re going to be worth over the next two or three years.”

Johnson concluded of Saturday’s record-setting day, “The question now is whether today’s stellar momentum leads to sustained economic growth into 2020 and beyond.”

 

via The Daily Wire

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KLAVAN: Christmas Changed Everything

A lot of people complain that Christmas is really a pagan holiday that’s been refitted for Christianity but, for me, that’s a feature not a bug.

For me, the birth of Christ — the incarnation of God’s Logos — the moment when the God we can’t see became visible and the God we can’t understand made Himself known — is like a spiritual atom bomb going off in history. After the blast, there’s all sorts of immediate effects: healing, miracles, the resurrection, crazy behavior like believers sitting on poles and handling snakes and speaking in tongues.

But over time, the radiation — or in this case, the radiance — spreads out and covers everything, permeates everything, transforms everything into a vehicle for itself.

History becomes new. We suddenly understand it as the events leading up to the arrival of the Christ child and the years of Our Lord leading away to the second coming.

Religion is changed. What was once an endless series of appeals and sacrifices by man to God becomes instead a vehicle of the Good News about the one sacrifice God made for man. It’s still religion. It’s still full of rules and doctrines and theories. But now those rules and doctrines and theories carry and spread the Good News and are only valid insofar as they contain the Good News.

And yes, holidays are transformed. A brute celebration of a physical event like the winter solstice becomes instead a joyous commemoration of the dawning of the Light of the World.

But the birth of Christ, like the birth of any man, is only the beginning.

A friend of mine recently made a wonderful observation about the Nicene Creed, the statement of basic Christian beliefs. He pointed out that Christ’s life is missing. One section of the creed declares that Christians believe Jesus “came down from heaven; he became incarnate by the Holy Spirit and the virgin Mary, and was made man. He was crucified for us under Pontius Pilate…”

Everything Jesus did and said vanishes between the period of one sentence and the start of another. My friend said it was as if they offered us the bread of a sandwich, but not the meat.

I sometimes fear too many of us believe, so to speak, in the bread of life, but not the life itself. We’re very swift to argue with one another over doctrine, but a little slow to go back and puzzle over what Jesus was actually trying to tell us. I don’t mean taking phrases out of context as a way to attack people we disagree with. I mean listening with full attention as the Logos of God tries to teach us how to align ourselves with Him.

Jesus said stuff. He told us to do stuff. He said, “Judge not lest you be judged.” He said, “Let him who is without sin throw the first stone.” I don’t think He was speaking in some kind of clever code when He said those things. I think He meant what He said exactly.

He told us to love God and love our neighbor — and to love our enemies, too, so that we’ll be children of our Father in heaven who causes the sun to rise on the evil and the good alike. God loves His human creation, in other words, and He wants us to act like His children and love it too.

I don’t think Jesus said these things so we would feel bad when we inevitably failed to do them. I don’t think he said them so we could dissect and twist them and make them mean something else. And I definitely don’t think he said them so we can throw them in one another’s faces.

I think he said them because he wanted to teach us joy. He wanted to tell us that when you attune your heart to the immensity of God’s love, you become joyful, and more joyful every day. I don’t mean happy. Happiness comes and goes. I mean abundantly alive, vitally present, crazily grateful to be even in this vale of tears.

At Christmas, what was once a celebration of the light of the sun and the abundant life it gives the Earth, becomes instead a commemoration of the Light of the World and the abundant life He offered all of us. Not just in His birth, because His birth was only the beginning. Not just in His death, though His death was not the end. His life, His works, His words  — these are the contents of the Incarnation. These are the gifts of Christmas.

Heaven and Earth will pass away, but those words will never pass away. The gift of joy is for us, and no one can take it from us. So let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid. Rejoice. Rejoice evermore.

And have a merry Christmas.

via The Daily Wire

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Dramatic Video Shows Muslim in US on Student Visa Violently Attack Arizona State Trooper, Forcing Officer to Shoot and Kill Him (VIDEO)


Mohamed Ahmed Al-Hashemi; photo: AZ police taken from prior arrest

An Arizona state trooper shot and killed a Qatari man who violently attacked him during a traffic stop, and it was all caught on the police dash cam.

25-year-old Mohamed Ahmed Al-Hashemi, who was in the US on a student visa, threw a street sign onto a road in Phoenix last Thursday, sparking a violent confrontation with the officer.

Trooper Hugh Grant ordered Al-Hashemi to pick up the sign, but he refused to obey commands even as the trooper ordered him to stop walking in the middle of the street.

Al-Hashemi then approached the police car and kicked the front grill.

The trooper used a stun gun to subdue Al-Hashemi but it didn’t stop him from rushing the officer and violently punching and kicking him.

After over a minute of fighting, the trooper, who was in a fight for his life had no choice but to fire his weapon, killing Al-Hashemi.

The dashboard cam shows the violent encounter and Trooper Grant was even thrown to the ground at one point.

Al-Hashemi was screaming the entire time he kicked and punched the officer.

The state trooper also had a female ride-along in the car from MADD [Mothers Against Drunk Driving] so he feared for her safety as well.

AP with the backstory on Al-Hashemi’s prior arrest:

Authorities said they didn’t know if Al-Hashemi was impaired. The trooper had injuries to his face and head and is resting at home.

Authorities say Al-Hashemi was arrested for trespassing at the Islamic Community Center of Tempe on Wednesday. Police in the Phoenix suburb of Tempe responded to a disturbance at the mosque around 4:30 a.m. At the center’s request, officers gave Al-Hashemi a warning and told him not to return, police spokesman Greg Bacon said.

Al-Hashemi returned in the early afternoon and officers were called again. Bacon said he was then arrested on a misdemeanor charge of trespassing and booked into jail.

It’s unclear how long Al-Hashemi has been living in the U.S. He was a former student at Arizona State University, which is based in Tempe, according to school officials. They didn’t provide other details.

Watch the dramatic dash cam footage (shots fired at the 2:38 mark):

The post Dramatic Video Shows Muslim in US on Student Visa Violently Attack Arizona State Trooper, Forcing Officer to Shoot and Kill Him (VIDEO) appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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Italian Exorcist Decries Rise of ‘Aggressive Satanism’

ROME — An Italian exorcist has denounced a steady rise in demonic activity as more and more young people abandon traditional spirituality and dabble in the occult.

“Satanism is getting much more aggressive and also diffused,” Dominican Father Francois Dermine told Crux, an online Catholic news outlet.

“Secularization leaves a void,” said the priest, who has worked as an exorcist for the Archdiocese of Ancona-Osimo since 1994. “Young people do not have anything to satisfy their spiritual and profound needs. They are thirsting for something, and the Church is not attractive anymore.”

Since the Church is no longer perceived as a valid option for many young people looking for answers, he said, “they try to find something elsewhere. This something is, many times, the demonic world.”

Satanism takes many forms, Dermine said, and many become exposed to it through forms of occult activity that seem harmless at first. Through these activities, young people risk acquiring “a Satanist mentality” in which familiarity with the demonic world becomes normalized.

“There are many groups of satanism,” the priest said, and Satanism often begins with seemingly innocuous games like the “Charlie Charlie challenge,” in which players attempt to summon a malignant Mexican spirit by balancing two pencils in the form of a cross and posing yes/no questions to “Charlie.”

This sort of game introduces children to the occult early, and such practices are becoming more widespread, Dermine said.

As an example, the priest cited the recent publication of A Children’s Book of Demons, a manual that gives kids instructions on how to summon up demons.

As Breitbart News reported last week, the International Association of Exorcists (AIE) has issued a statement warning parents of the dangers the book, which targets children aged 5-10.

The book was written by Aaron Leighton, an illustrator and “fan” of occult practices and invites children to call forth demons as a way of dealing with unpleasant problems such as chores, homework, and getting rid of bullies.

“Satanism is not always so explicit, but it is becoming more and more so, and the publication of this book is a sign of this,” Father Dermine told Crux, observing that up until a few years ago such a would have been inconceivable.

As an explanation for the growth of interest in the demonic, Dermine points to the breakdown of stable structures such marriages and families, as well as a deterioration of education.

If children had received love in their own families, “it would be much more difficult to follow these kinds of ideologies,” he said. “It would be much more difficult to penetrate their minds.”

“If the adult world does not offer alternatives, it is more difficult for younger generations to adopt a stable way of life. It’s very difficult, it’s almost a miracle,” he said.

Although many adults try to dismiss occultism as a harmless fad, Dermine insists it is very real and very dangerous.

“It’s not only a vague fear, it’s a very concrete risk,” he said. “We must not underestimate this, because violence among young people is becoming more and more diffused.”

“A violent mentality is very dangerous for our society, very, very dangerous,” he said. “Our society risks collapse if it continues like this.”

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via Breitbart News

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A small business owner faces red tape and left-wing activists in San Francisco

Joey Mucha’s arcade rental business in San Francisco grew out of his love for Skee-ball. For the last five years, he has been renting Skee-ball and other machines out of a warehouse in the Mission District. Recently, Murcha decided to convert the space into an arcade/restaurant that would be open]]>

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