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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
35 w

Dry Seasons, Imposter Syndrome, and Reawakening: Season 4 Q&A with Sam and Ray
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Dry Seasons, Imposter Syndrome, and Reawakening: Season 4 Q&A with Sam and Ray

In the final episode of You’re Not Crazy, Ray Ortlund and Sam Allberry share their gratitude, reflect on the podcast’s challenges and joys, and offer encouragement and insights on building gospel culture, adapting preaching styles, and navigating ministry challenges. They discuss the following: Their gratitude for You’re Not Crazy listeners The challenges and achievements of the podcast How to build gospel culture in established churches Changing preaching styles Gospel culture in business meetings and staff gatherings How to navigate ministry challenges and imposter syndrome Future plans and their final encouragement for listeners Recommended resource: Daily Liturgy Devotional: 40 Days of Worship and Prayer by Douglas Sean O’Donnell
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Pet Life
Pet Life
35 w

Police Finds Loyal Pit Bull Guarding His Owner’s Dead Body
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Police Finds Loyal Pit Bull Guarding His Owner’s Dead Body

A man who went missing on October 13 was found dead on the 15th, with his dog guarding his dead body, Lewis County Sheriff’s Department says. On October 14, The Lewis County Sheriff’s Office revealed on their Facebook page that they were actively searching for 39-year-old Cody M. Johnson and his dog. “Cody made a phone call at about 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, October 12, which is the last known contact with him,” the Lewis County Sheriff’s Office reveals. USA TODAY reports that the man was found dead in Lewis County, New York by a local camp owner on October 15, around 3:35 P.M, with his loyal Pit Bull right by his side. “His dog Afton had not left … Cody alone and (the dog) was located in good health,” Lewis County Sheriff’s Department investigator, James Blackwell, wrote in an email. The investigator later added that it seems like Johnson may have died due to being outdoors in the cold weather. Furthermore, Sheriff Mike Carpinelli tells WWNY that when they found Johnson’s body, Afton refused to leave his owner’s side. The loyal pooch, which was revealed to be Johnson’s service dog for years, was only able to calm down after being offered water and biscuits. “I was shown the photographs of the scene where it was,” Carpinelli said, “and just hearing that the animal was with the owner just goes to show the loyalty that dogs have with owners, the loyalty to it.” Carpinelli also said that it was a little comforting knowing that Johnson wasn’t alone in the cold when he passed away. “The dog that’d been with him for quite a while. His companion, and the loyalty he had with Cody. He stayed with him all those days and those evenings.” WWNY reveals that Afton is now being taken care of by a family friend and will be turned over to Johnson’s family who are coming up from North Carolina.
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NewsBusters Feed
NewsBusters Feed
35 w

UNBURDENED: CBS’s O’Donnell MAD About Trump’s Garbage Truck ‘Stunt’
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UNBURDENED: CBS’s O’Donnell MAD About Trump’s Garbage Truck ‘Stunt’

With her tenure as anchor of the CBS Evening News coming to a close, Norah O’Donnell is now unburdened by what is, and is now openly and brazenly editorializing ahead of reporter packages. Former President Donald Trump’s response to President Joe Biden calling Trump supporters ‘garbage” was simply too much for O’Donnell to countenance. Watch as O’Donnell unleashes a whopper to open the newscast (emphases mine): NORAH O’DONNELL: We are now six days out from Election Day. Nearly 60 million votes have already been cast in early in-person voting and through the mail. And the latest polls suggest the race cannot be tighter. Both campaigns are locking their focus on the battleground states. Vice President Kamala Harris rallied in North Carolina and Pennsylvania today and is in Wisconsin tonight. Former President Donald Trump was in North Carolina earlier, and tonight he is also in Wisconsin. He landed in Green Bay just a short time ago and then pulled this campaign stunt, speaking to reporters from a garbage truck, proof that he and his supporters are giving no grace to a gaffe by President Biden where he, in his explanation, inadvertently called Trump supporters “garbage”. This, of course, was in response to that racist joke about floating garbage told at a Trump rally just last weekend. Vice President Harris is distancing herself from the negativity, and trying to drive home her unifying message that if elected, she will represent all Americans. This is the kind of over-the-top propagandizing that may well make both the North Korean anchor lady and ABC’s Mary Bruce say, “whoa, take it down a notch.” First, there is O’Donnell’s rank dismissal of the garbage truck play as a “stunt”, which is language that is limited to describing the activities on one side of the aisle. Were a Democrat to do this, they’d be hailed for their strategic acumen and keen connection to the common folk. Trump doesn’t get that courtesy. Then, there’s the line about giving no grace to Biden. How much more grace does Biden need, exactly, after having the Regime Media act as his Praetorian Guard for the last three and a half years? Biden got tons of grace in the form of non-coverage whenever he wandered off the stage at an event, shaking hands with empty air. Biden drew tons of grace from a Regime Media more interested in firefighting his scandals than performing journalism. Now contrast that with the media’s spread of every possible hoax and baseless rumor as pertained to Donald Trump. Suggesting that Biden unloading on Trump supporters was an inadvertent gaffe is an insult to the public’s intelligence. Then, the cherry on top: O’Donnell pivoting to Vice President Kamala Harris’s efforts to “distance herself from the negativity”, and the description of her message as “unifying”. This kind of gross propaganda proves Jeff Bezos’ point about the public losing interest in the media. O’Donnel then tossed to correspondent Robert Costa’s report on the Trump campaign, which featured the aforementioned garbage truck. But with that kind of editorial embedded into an intro, why even bother with a report? Click “expand” to view the full transcript of the aforementioned report as aired on the CBS Evening News on Wednesday, October 30th, 2024:  CBS EVENING NEWS 10/30/24 6:30 PM NORAH O’DONNELL: Good evening. I'm Norah O'Donnell, and thank you for joining us. We are now six days out from Election Day. Nearly 60 million votes have already been cast in early in-person voting and through the mail. And the latest polls suggest the race cannot be tighter. Both campaigns are locking their focus on the battleground states. Vice President Kamala Harris rallied in North Carolina and Pennsylvania today and is in Wisconsin tonight. Former President Donald Trump was in North Carolina earlier, and tonight he is also in Wisconsin. He landed in Green Bay just a short time ago and then pulled this campaign stunt, speaking to reporters from a garbage truck, proof that he and his supporters are giving no grace to a gaffe by President Biden where he, in his explanation, inadvertently called Trump supporters “garbage”. This, of course, was in response to that racist joke about floating garbage told at a Trump rally just last weekend. Vice President Harris is distancing herself from the negativity, and trying to drive home her unifying message that if elected, she will represent all Americans. We have correspondents covering both campaigns, and we are going to start with CBS's Robert Costa in Green Bay, Wisconsin. And Robert, tell us what’s happening on the tarmac there. ROBERT COSTA: Good evening, Norah. President Biden's comment continues to roil this presidential campaign in the final advent. Tonight, former President Trump is on the tarmac here in Green Bay, Wisconsin, climbing into a garbage truck. It's all about underscoring his argument that he stands with everyday Americans. Former President Donald Trump hit the trail in North Carolina, as Republicans sense a sudden opening to cast the Democrats as out of touch. DONALD TRUMP: Look how they’ve treated you. They've treated you like garbage, frankly. They've treated you like garbage. COSTA: Trump expressed outrage at comments made by President Biden, and took aim at Vice President Harris. TRUMP: My response to Joe and Kamala is very simple: You can't lead America if you don't love Americans. You just can’t. COSTA: Biden's remarks were made during a video call with Latino activists and sparked debate over what he meant. JOE BIDEN: The only garbage I see floating out there is his supporters. His- his- his demonization of Latinos is unconscionable, and it’s un-American. COSTA: Biden later clarified and said he was not calling Trump supporters “garbage”, saying “I referred to the hateful rhetoric about Puerto Rico spewed by Trump's supporter at his Madison Square Garden rally.” As some Democrats privately expressed frustration that this episode is a distraction, Vice President Harris weighed in. KAMALA HARRIS: He clarified his comments, but let me be clear. I strongly disagree with any criticism of people based on who they vote for. COSTA: Meanwhile, Trump's campaign filed a lawsuit in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, raising questions about the integrity of the voting process in a Philadelphia suburb that is a prized battleground in a key state. A state judge sided with the Trump campaign, extending an in-person voting option in Bucks County, where long lines on the final day led to complaints voters were being disenfranchised by an unprepared election office. VOTER: I'm not blaming the Board of Elections. I believe that they should have been more prepared, that's all. It's a big election for people. COSTA: Bucks County election officials say there was no intent to suppress any vote and are doing their best to keep up with intense voter interest. The Harris campaign is paying close attention to Bucks County as well. Top Democrats tell CBS News that if she wins Pennsylvania, it could come down to Bucks County. That is why she is reaching out to traditional Republicans, moderate Republicans in these final days. Norah. O’DONNELL: Robert Costa, thank you.  
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YubNub News
YubNub News
35 w

Possible cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah?
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Possible cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah?

There’s word of a possible cease-fire between Israel and Hezbollah. Ukraine reveals details of North Korea’s presence in Russia. As Sudan faces the world’s first famine in seven years, the U.S.…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
35 w

Where Did Hitch ‘Go Wrong’?
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Where Did Hitch ‘Go Wrong’?

To many of his contemporaries who approach writing as an act of creative exertion rather than just a vehicle for transmitting thoughts, an act of self-realization and of compulsive assertion of oneself,…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
35 w

Huzzah for Transparency!
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Huzzah for Transparency!

A report from Forbes that “at least 100 billionaires” were supporting either the former President Donald Trump or Vice President Kamala Harris points once again to the unseemly involvement of rich…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
35 w

American Outreach to Middle Eastern Despots Is Shortsighted
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American Outreach to Middle Eastern Despots Is Shortsighted

President Joe Biden is an increasingly decrepit lame duck. A Washington fixture for more than 50 years, he is lost in time, believing that the U.S. is still the unipower and essential nation, enabling…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
35 w

Can the United Kingdom and France Team Up in the Third Nuclear Age?
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Can the United Kingdom and France Team Up in the Third Nuclear Age?

Europe’s only nuclear powers have a lot in common. France and the United Kingdom have both been contributors to NATO’s nuclear deterrence posture since the Ottawa Communique of 1974. Despite France…
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
35 w

Halloween: Meet The Spooky Animals Named After Ghosts
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Halloween: Meet The Spooky Animals Named After Ghosts

Happy Halloween!
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
35 w

Where Did Hitch ‘Go Wrong’?
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Where Did Hitch ‘Go Wrong’?

Culture Where Did Hitch ‘Go Wrong’? The late Christopher Hitchens’s work was of a piece, good and bad. Credit: image via Getty Images To many of his contemporaries who approach writing as an act of creative exertion rather than just a vehicle for transmitting thoughts, an act of self-realization and of compulsive assertion of oneself, Christopher Hitchens is understandably something of a cult hero. Hitchens was born two decades too late to count himself among the Cold War greats—Buckley, Muggeridge, Vidal, Updike, Mailer, and others—but could turn a phrase with the best of them. His provenance in a younger generation did not impede his ability to produce some of the crispest, most lucid prose authored in the modern English language, but it did provide him with a novel frame of political reference. He cut his teeth not on the bipolar U.S.–Soviet competition, which had progressed well past its denouement by the time he entered his prime as a published writer, but on the 1990’s transition to a world where Western-led institutions seemed to be the only game in town.  Hitchens’s views on religion, international politics, and the interplay between the two germinated in that garden of Western triumphalism. He was, to his credit, inoculated against the most zealous paeans to unipolarity, pithily dismissing Francis Fukuyama’s end of history thesis as “self-congratulation raised to the status of philosophy.” Yet he always nurtured a complementary strain, friendly if not identical to neoconservative militant manichaeism, that sadly overtook him after the events of September 11 and the invasion of Iraq. His approach to the Iraq disaster was anything but that of a reluctant fellow traveler, roped into an uneasy acquiescence after many a sleepless night. To the contrary, as Hitchens later confessed, he “felt exhilarated on the eleventh of September” and is only “slightly ashamed to say that.” The tragic events of September 11 posed, in Hitchens’s anti-religious cosmology, a kind of Pearl Harbor moment; the theocratic-fundamentalist threat to civilization revealing a ghastly visage, its malice billowing from the rubble of the Twin Towers. And thus the battle lines were drawn, in a way that Western leaders could no longer paper over, in a world war between good and evil, or liberal-democratic secular humanism versus the authoritarian forces of backward fascist fundamentalism. “I thought, ok, right, I’ll never get bored of fighting against these people, and their defeat will be absolute,” Hitchens recounted.  Some of the Iraq War’s more apologetic proponents have since conceded the point, which seems obvious in hindsight but was tragically lost on many at the time, that that there was no salient connection between Iraq and those despicable attacks, and that the War on Terror has led U.S. Middle East policy down a decades-long march of folly from which American security and strategic interests have still not recovered, if indeed they ever can. But Hitchens, true to his brand if nothing else, doggedly resisted any such exercise in expiation. His defense of the Iraq War drew on all the neoconservative stations of the cross with a vim and vigor that only strengthened in the years following the invasion. “A much-wanted war criminal was put on public trial,” Hitchens wrote. “The Kurdish and Shiite majority was rescued from the ever-present threat of a renewed genocide. A huge, hideous military and party apparatus, directed at internal repression and external aggression was (perhaps overhastily) dismantled…  Not unimportantly, a battlefield defeat has been inflicted on al-Qaida and its surrogates, who (not without some Baathist collaboration) had hoped to constitute the successor regime in a failed state and an imploded society.” Hitchens concedes all kinds of missteps along the way, but maintains none of them can impeach the venture’s fundamental necessity and nobility. The Bush administration’s most serious mistake, he insists, was that it should have invaded Iraq much sooner. There is, to be sure, an obvious contrarian streak coloring his professional career. Hitchens was an inveterate oppositionist, always defining himself against the consensus. Hence his lifelong crusade against all religions, matched in passion and intensity only by his later crusade against the Clintons; hence the gleeful iconoclasm with which he ran a red pen through the legacy of “hell’s angel” Mother Teresa, though one may say she got off light compared to “thug, crook, liar and murderer” Henry Kissinger. Why, after all, bother reaching for low-hanging fruit? Any professional contrarian would tell you that the jabs are always wittier, the retorts sharper, the cases more elegantly argued, when cutting against the grain; or, as Hitchens put it to a none-too-amused audience during a late-night show appearance, there comes a point when joking for the hundredth time about George Bush’s intelligence says more about your own than it does about his.  It is true that the leading faces of American intelligentsia—academia, journalism, literature and the arts, etc.—had sharply turned against the war effort, much like they did during U.S. involvement in Vietnam, for reasons Hitchens dismissed as frivolous and myopic, if not downright contemptible. Under the circumstances, there would have been something distinctly un-Hitchensian in letting this popular consensus go unchallenged; it would have been contrary to his nature as a public intellectual, akin to a fox reacting with disinterest to an unguarded henhouse. And it must be stated, lest he be falsely accused of rank opportunism, that his stance on Iraq remained remarkably, even perfectly consistent all the way through his passing in 2011.  What’s noteworthy isn’t that Hitchens was wrong on Iraq, but that he was wrong for all the reasons that the neoconservative mandarins of his time wanted to be right. Here was a bona fide man of the left, a self-described Trotskyist with all the activist credentials to boot, defending the Iraq debacle—or, in Hitchens’s preferred phrasing, the “Anglo-American intervention in Iraq” and, when he’s playing to an audience, “the Mesopotamian War”—with some of the finest prose ever authored on the issue. Hitchens consecrated the war on terror as a chiliastic civilizational battle in terms that would be familiar to Americans today, and with many of the same figurants. “Who says [Bush] wasn’t right to call that an axis of evil? Everything we found about these countries is much worse than we thought,” Hitchens said in a 2005 address, referring to the Bush administration’s bundling of Iran, Iraq, and North Korea as enemies of the United States.  His conviction that the West must secure a “military victory over the alliance between autocracy and jihad,” while shaped on the contours by his approach to the whole topic of religion, is in essence indistinguishable from countless other neoconservative formulations of the same underlying belief that international politics is a battle to the death between incompatible value systems, and that the energies of Western civilization must be directed with unyielding focus toward vanquishing the world’s many evildoers.  The intent behind this intellectual excavation is not to argue with Hitchens about the Iraq war, much less to nitpick his reasons for supporting it. The goal, rather, is to offer a more nuanced understanding of why he believed the things he did, as strongly as he did. A great many of Hitchens’s detractors, and a few allies, have tried to account for what is sometimes referred to as his “transformation,” as if to find that moment where it all went wrong, or, conversely, when he finally saw the light. This is an entirely false premise, built on a failure to recognize the teleology running through his career.  Hitchens’s work never presumed, and indeed, was explicitly arrayed against, a postmodern or relativized outlook on questions of good and evil. To the contrary, his affiliation with neoconservatism was a byproduct of his crusade to rid the world, one intervention at a time, of what he condemned as a backwards, repressive, authoritarian ethos that has taken root in much of the non-Western world. It was not a repudiation but a natural extension of his earlier Trotskyite views, adapted to the post-Cold War consensus that the U.S. can and should project its outsized influence to shape, and if needed, bend the world according to the universal dictates of liberal democracy.  It remains a black mark on Hitchens’s legacy that he energetically acquiesced to this crusader-state model of American power and remained resolute in his support even after witnessing its heavy toll at home and abroad. Merely being one of his generation’s greatest writers did not suffice; he labored with Stakhanovite intensity to become neoconservatism’s most eloquent defender. It’s an honorific sure to rouse everything from furious consternation to rapturous delight, depending on one’s point of departure, but never indifference. Hitchens wouldn’t have had it any other way. The post Where Did Hitch ‘Go Wrong’? appeared first on The American Conservative.
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