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Archived Writings & Daily Thoughts

11/01/07

Now faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. - Hebrews 11:1

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Anne Graham Lotz

Peter Marshall

Carol Moore

Paige Patterson

Hank Price

Robb Provost

Darrell Scott

David Tanabe

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Glen Wesley

Dr. John Whitcomb

Tim Wilkins

New! Prejudiced for Eternity - The American Spectator: This summer, as has been its custom in recent years, the megachurch (Southern Baptist, not Willow Creek) I attend brought in a series of guest speakers while the pastor caught a break. One of the most compelling was James Walker, president of the Watchman Fellowship, which fancies itself a Christian discerner of new religious movements, cults, the occult, and New Age-ism.

New! Be Wary of Climate Policy Development - Seattle Post-Intelligencer: Imagine you are an advocacy group and want to sway a government's policy development, but really want to keep your activism a secret. You could learn a lot by observing and then avoiding the practices of the Center for Climate Strategies, a group of global warming worrywarts.

New! Beware of Climate Control - The Washington Examiner: While the media and environmentalists regularly hammer the Bush administration for its alleged lethargy in addressing global warming, an activist group is working through individual states and substantially influencing how they will reduce their output of greenhouse gases.

Here are links to my blog posts from my mission trip to Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam and Laos in May 2007:

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12544

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12594

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PZjI6qK0iXc

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12606

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12620

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12621

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12622

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12629

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12651

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12657

http://www.johnlocke.org/lockerroom/lockerroom.html?id=12658

The Latest

NOTE: Now also contributing to American Spectator's blog!

I have suspended blogging for this Web site, since as noted above I am blogging regularly at the Spectator. Also, look for regular blogging from me at The Locker Room. Archived posts there can be found doing an author search under my name.

Maybe we could buy more useless forest with the proceeds

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 22, 2006

Alabama sold a life-sized statue of Smokey the Bear at a surplus auction. Surely North Carolina could get rid of a lot more of their crap than they do. Anyone want to start the bidding on the Global TransPark?

Amount due: $1.00

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 21, 2006

Several public officials who went on the Tall Ships ferry boat party cruise have paid for their share of the cost of the trip, The News & Observer reports today, but it looks like one of them had a little trouble doing the math. The state estimated the cost per person for the cruise was $91.25. Some, like Republican Rep. Bill Daughtridge and Democrat Rep. Russell Tucker, obviously calculated for two and paid $182.50. But Democrat Rep. Margaret Dickson's calculator apparently failed her: she paid $181.50.

Corruption has consequences, sometimes fatal

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 21, 2006

Marvin Olasky today has an "Enlightening" story about how dastardly decisions due to corruption can have severe consequences. God forbid that something like that should happen here, but chances are it already has.

Shaw's status endangered

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 20, 2006

If Keith Ellison, the "Minnesota Muslim" running for Congress in that state's 5th District, wins as expected, he will become the nation's highest ranking elected follower of Islam -- surpassing North Carolina State Sen. Larry Shaw.

Cursed infrastructure

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 18, 2006

Did you know that North Carolina has 5,250 dams? And that among the 22 percent of the 5,250 dams in North Carolina classified as a high hazard, only one in five had an emergency action plan attached them? And that "high hazard" means that there would be significant loss of life and property downstream should the dam fail?

(Expletive)!

Build it, and they will come?

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 18, 2006

We (my wife and I) have been watching a medical building (for dental offices) go up behind our nearby CVS for months now, and it has seemed to take for-ev-er to finish it off.

Now I understand why.

It goes to eleven

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 12, 2006

I found this "Top Eleven" list on the MySpace site of one of last year's Governor's School West students, which I've written about extensively. Nothing super funny -- a lot of "the food is bad" jokes -- just some revealing insights. Edited for typos.

Top 11 Signs That You're a GSW Student

1. You're not sure what the brown mush you ate for lunch was, and to be honest, you don't want to talk about it.

2. You're completely surrounded by liberals who complain about how they expected there to be more liberals.

3. Everyone around you is an individualist...but they're all wearing the same flip-flops.

4. You've memorized the phone numbers of ten different take-out places for fear that if you didn't, you'd starve.

5. In one day, you met a lesbian, hippie, nudist, and a Baptist.

6. You've been here a week and already worn out three pairs of flip-flops.

7. It's cooler lying on the pavement at noon than being in your room.

8. You've ordered pizza more than you've eaten in the Refectory.

9. There are people on your hall who, despite their best efforts, still haven't had a shower.

10. You think
Svi Shapiro is the most brillant man on the planet and now worship him as a god.

11. You think Svi Shapiro was sent by the Devil to ruin your way of life and corrupt those around you.

A danger to Washington?

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 9, 2006

Contrary to what most people think, Democrat Heath Shuler does have a track record that Republican Rep. Charles Taylor, whom the former Redskins quarterback is challenging in the N.C. 11th District race, can run against:





The ads are the creation of Redskins fan
Jason Woodmansee.

That snappish dog

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 8, 2006

Rhode Island Sen. Lincoln Chafee's sudden new "hold" on the nomination of John Bolton as permanent U.N. ambassador reminds me of that not-so-charming "feisty quality" that the Ocean State has about it -- which I wrote about for The News & Observer three years ago.

How American dummies succeed

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 6, 2006

Robert J. Samuelson, citing Charlotte's Central Piedmont Community College as one example, explores this question in his Washington Post column today: "With about 12 million students, the nation's 1,200 community colleges help answer this riddle: Why do Americans do so badly on international educational comparisons and yet support an advanced economy?"

His answer, in a nutshell, is that the free market pushes the workforce where it's needed.
 

The American learning system has, I think, two big virtues.

First, it provides second chances. It tries to teach people when they're motivated to learn -- which isn't always when they're in high school or starting college. People become motivated later for many reasons, including maturity, marriage, mortgages and crummy jobs. These people aren't shut out. They can mix work, school and training....

Second, it's job-oriented. Community colleges provide training for local firms and offer courses to satisfy market needs.


Lots more common sense therein.

Hands off the Constitution

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 5, 2006

J. Harvie Wilkinson, a judge on the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals who is always mentioned as a candidate by conservatives when a Supreme Court vacancy opens, writes interestingly (and sometimes persuasively) today in The Washington Post against a federal constitutional amendment that would ban same-sex marriages.
 

Proponents of the amendment say that states need protection from activist judges in other jurisdictions, but states already have this protection through the Defense of Marriage Act and public policy defenses allowed under the full faith and credit clause. As a result, a constitutional amendment is at most a backstop for powers that states possess without any congressional action at all. There is no greater need for such a constitutional backstop here than there is for a constitutional amendment bolstering states' authority to pass a sales tax, establish a transportation department or support public education.


It's a consistent argument with those who advocate that Roe v. Wade was an abominable decision that should have been left to the individual states.

We're so over it

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 4, 2006

The Washington Times reports that Patrick Henry College -- the "homeschool" university -- has gotten past last year's split over academic freedom and is "ready to start fresh."

Erik Root, formerly of the Locke Foundation's Center for Local Innovation and now research director for the N.C. Family Policy Council, was identified as the instigator of what became a one-third faculty revolt at Patrick Henry.

10:30 a.m. Update, clarification from Erik: "13 of 22 professors left last year (more than 50 percent, apparently including part-timers). The issue was bigger than me and I was not the instigator. I was the occasion why many faculty stood up and said enough. There were problems LONG before the debacle over me."

The Washington Post in May
also gave an account of the controversy at Patrick Henry.

Corrupt Bastards Club

Posted by Paul Chesser, September 2, 2006

No evidence that there is an organized chapter in North Carolina (yet), but the FBI just raided one in Alaska, where several legislators are apparent members -- including the son of Mr. "Bridge to Nowhere," U.S. Sen. Ted Stevens.

Abstinence evasion

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 31, 2006

The American Spectator Online today has my piece up today defending the president's AIDS program in Africa. Probably not a libertarian's cup o' tea, and truth be told, I'd prefer no government involvement. But the point is that if this is what the government is going to do, then the president's way is preferable to the U.N.'s.

Big surprise -- it's Ted Stevens

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 30, 2006

Mr. "Bridge to Nowhere" is the senator who's had a hold on the bill that would create a searchable database of all federal contracts and grants.

Pork-like flavor

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 25, 2006

Doug Bandow, on a trip to Burma and Thailand, shares the fruits of his research into the tastiness of certain foreign delicacies.

Climate scientists 'scratching their heads'

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 25, 2006

Pat Michaels today on American Spectator Online explains why, contrary to predictions, the oceans are losing their heat.

Conventional wisdom debunked again.

Pluto gets demoted...

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 24, 2006

...and word is that he's not too happy about it.

Give Clinton credit

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 23, 2006

Bill, that is. The Heritage Foundation's Robert Rector says in The Washington Post today that the former president deserves more credit than he gets from conservatives for the success of welfare reform.

New front on immigration battle

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 23, 2006

Businesses are suing competitors who hire illegal aliens because it puts them at a disadvantage.

Lean budgets with pork?

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 22, 2006

The Washington Times today begins an occasional series which will apparently cover various races for the U.S. Senate, and starts with the Pennsylvania contest between incumbent Republican Rick Santorum and his challenger, Democrat Robert Casey, who currently leads polls. Perhaps a bit surprisingly (but justifiably), this story comes off (to me) as unflattering to Santorum, emphasizing the decisions he's made that are less than conservative:

Typical of his campaigning these days was a stop earlier this month at the Pittsburgh Zoo, where he boasted to local reporters about how he'd fetched $500,000 from federal taxpayers to build one of the most luxurious polar-bear exhibits outside Arctic climes.

"They're building underwater tunnels so you're actually under water," Mr. Santorum told his awe-struck children as they toured the construction site and approached a tunnel of 4-inchglass that will allow zoo visitors to view the bears from below.

After the zoo event, Mr. Santorum was asked whether funding for the polar-bear exhibit really was all that important, given the federal government's hemorrhaging debt, looming financial crisis in entitlement programs and expensive emergencies, such as the war in Iraq and rebuilding after Hurricane Katrina.

"If the pot of money is there, I'm going to make sure we get a piece of that money," said Mr. Santorum, who defended his record of support for "lean" budgets.

That's the wrong answer for some of his longtime supporters.

"Where does the federal government get the constitutional right to take $500,000 from people to build a polar-bear exhibit?" asked Charlie Clift, who has supported Mr. Santorum in every past election.

Hal of Pancakes

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 18, 2006

Jim Black's challenger, Hal Jordan, visited an IHOP too yesterday.

'World Trade Center'

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 17, 2006

"World Trade Center" is probably one of the most pro-family films ever.

Some of the reviews I have read were critical of the emphasis of too many scenes in which family members are shown fretting over the fate of their trapped loved ones. They likened it to nothing more than another made-for-TV "Movie of the Week." But Stone uses those scenes to build to the most important message he delivers in the film: That family commitment, support and unity can save lives. That may sound hokey to some, but I defy anyone to not be moved when Nicholas Cage's character sees his wife (played by Maria Bello) for the first time after he is brought to the hospital.

Add to that the demands made by the Cage character's youngest son to his mother, and a number of flashback scenes that alone don't seem significant but together are meaningful, Stone builds a powerful case that by virtue of their commitment to one another, these families were as heroic as those brave souls who were involved in the rescue efforts.

How about a Saturday rally in the parking lot?

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 17, 2006

Talk about dumb -- the New York Times reports that one Democratic campaign strategy is to run against Wal-Mart.

Conspiracy theory

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 11, 2006

Do you think the Bush administration waited until after Joe Lieberman lost in his Connecticut primary on Tuesday to authorize the foiling of the terrorists' plot to blow up the airplanes? Waiting to do so would have given anti-war candidate (and ultimate victor) Ned Lamont the advantage, allowed Lieberman to go Independent, and hopefully (for Republicans) in the final results (after November) reduce the Democrats' number in the Senate by one.

If it's not there already, watch for this theory to emerge on a liberal blog somewhere.

Why are some athletes such clutch performers?

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 9, 2006

Answer: Because at those crucial moments, they are somewhere else.

Everywhere is freaks and hairies

Posted by Paul Chesser, August 2, 2006

I'd love to change the world of newspapers, especially when they publish drivel.

Please don't feed the homeless

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 28, 2006

It's illegal.

Immigration ordinance creates ghost town

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 28, 2006

Riverside, N.J., on Wednesday night passed the Illegal Immigration Relief Act, which "makes it illegal to hire people who cannot prove they are legally in the United States, or to rent or lease them property." Fines start at $1,000 per offense, and a violator also could lose his or her business permit for five years.
 

Before Brazilian immigrants began moving here in the last five years or so, (Celeste) Martiniano (a restaurant owner) said, the downtown business district, once a bustling shopping area, had been in decline. But of the new ordinance, she said, “this is going to kill the town.”

For the last 25 years, Ms. Martiniano has lived in this Burlington County town of 8,000 residents, where as many as 2,000 to 3,000 immigrants live today. Business has been good since the opening of her restaurant two years ago, largely because of the growing Brazilian population. But on this day, there were no takers for the chicken legs spinning on spits over open flames.


She shouldn't worry. Subsidies, incentives, TIFs, economic development groups, non-profits -- oh, and politicians -- are always there to pick up the slack.

In their back pocket

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 28, 2006

The New York Times says the climatologist voice crying in the wilderness -- Pat Michaels -- is being paid by the coal-burning utilities! He can't possibly be objective, of course, because big business is funding the publicity of his views. Meanwhile the well-funded global warming alarmists benefit from the those whose motives are pure and honest. Right?

The real tab

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 27, 2006

Public spending on the Tall Ships festival: $2 million.

Running but not running

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 27, 2006

Lewis Cheek's name will be on the ballot, but he's not going to campaign against Durham D.A. Mike Nifong.

Time to go name some more cows

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 27, 2006

Mr. Disclosure, House Speaker Pro Tempore Richard Morgan, has gotten religion on keeping the public informed about the actions of legislators, campaigns, and especially "527" political groups.
 

"They no longer believe that people like you and me working together can help them solve the problems that they face," said Morgan, R-Moore, in what may be his final substantive speech on the floor after eight terms in office. "They don't trust us to be honest."


No truth to the report that a dramatic silence momentarily fell over the floor of the General Assembly upon the completion of Morgan's eloquent and heartfelt monologue. Nor is it true that legislators afterward streamed to makeshift confessionals outside the chambers to repent en masse from their once-hidden sins.

But corks were heard a-poppin' upon adjournment! Off to Thee Dollhouse for the final hoo-ha!

CBS eye runny

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 27, 2006

The firm that helped create the Swift Boat Veterans' campaign against John Kerry in 2004, and also hammered the “60 Minutes II” report on President Bush’s record in the Texas Air National Guard that led to Dan Rather’s resignation, is promoting Oliver Stone's "World Trade Center."

You don't have to look far

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 27, 2006

There are plenty of places Washington Post sage columnist David Broder could have gone to find a conservative who is outraged with President Bush. But instead -- and I can't believe his editors let him do this -- he banged out a whole column explaining the "Simmering Rage Within the GOP" based almost entirely on a single, faux-conservative who is upset that the stem-cell bill was vetoed and that the minimum wage hasn't been raised.

And to top it off, Broder doesn't identify him! He further (un)identifies that "simmering rage" by citing unattributed comments of frustration at Lyn Nofziger's funeral in the spring.

His finishing touch is to reveal the glee among Republicans over Ralph Reed's primary loss for lieutenant governor in Georgia. Broder portrays that as some vindication for "conservatives" who are allegedly resentful toward the "religious right," of which Reed was supposedly a beloved member. But conservative Christians dismissed Reed as one of their own long ago.

Broder's journalism here fails basic standards and arrives at deeply flawed conclusions to boot. He should know better

Sweet Home Alabama, third from the bottom

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 27, 2006

Former NBA star Charles Barkley is thinking about running for governor in his home state of Alabama. Once a Republican, he now says he would run as a Democrat.
 

In Barkley's remarks in Destin, he was not complimentary of Alabama's past leadership.

"If it wasn't for Arkansas and Mississippi, we'd be dead last in everything. I think we can do better," he said.


And he's sounding like Bill Cosby.
 

Barkley told the school board members that poor children don't have a level playing field with wealthier students, because the poor children have to cope with more problems like crime, drugs and teen pregnancy. But he also admonished some black parents and their children.

"There are too many black kids and their parents who do not value a good education," he said. "There are places where a black kid who is a good student and tries to speak correctly, you hear stuff like, 'He's trying to be white.' Well, I say, if that's true, we need more kids trying to be white."

Powerful restraint

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 27, 2006

Washington (State) Supreme Justice Barbara Madsen included a remarkable remark in writing the opinion for the majority while upholding (barely) a ban on same-sex marriage in the state:
 

"The solid body of constitutional law disfavors the conclusion that there is a right to marry a person of the same sex. Same-sex marriage may be the law at a future time, but it will be because the people declare it to be, not because five members of this court have dictated it."


She obviously doesn't know the opportunity for a good power grab when she sees one.

Find someplace else to frolic

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 27, 2006

The cruel, callous management of Carr Mill Mall in Carrboro wants Bruce Thomas to take his dance act elsewhere:
 

In the yard of Weaver Street Market in downtown Carrboro, the slim, lithe dancing man seemed more iconic; he was a representation of the creativity that the town boasts as its most stunning asset.

When Thomas feels the groove, there's nothing that can stop him from shimmying, skipping and two-stepping his way among the co-op's outdoor patrons.

"That is a common area for the entire Carr Mill Mall," explained Carr Mill Manager Nathan Milian. "We don't allow performers to use the lawn without our permission."

"Our property is commercial," Milian said. "There are plenty of public areas -- the town commons, the farmers market -- where he can express himself."


But some patrons who like Thomas's gyrations are calling his removal "discrimination."
 

"It's a combination of creative movements," Thomas said. "I call it 'Dancing for the glory of God.'"


If it's for the glory of God, then the ACLU isn't going to let him dance on the town commons either.

Amorello's tough decision

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 27, 2006

The chief of Boston's farcical Big Dig project finally gave in and resigned.
 

Matthew Amorello's resignation will be effective August 15, but he will continue to receive his $223,000 annual salary through February 15.


That's teaching him!

Woody at 70

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 26, 2006

For a lifetime Woody Allen, despite his limited box office appeal, has been indulged by studios with broad creative freedom (if not budgetary freedom) and widespread critical acclaim, whether earned or not. Many of the world's greatest actors have worked for him for peanuts. He just enjoyed the release of his most popular work in years, "Match Point."

But
he's bummed about his age. Why? For one reason, he's too old to chase skirts.
 

"Once you get up in years, like seventies, there's nothing good about it. The dynamite women you see on the street, that world is gone to you.

"You know, it's inappropriate," he mutters, as though he's about to think better of discussing this. "One of the great pastimes of my life was eyeing girls in short skirts, and that's gone. They're unavailable to you, and in the few cases where you could work your magic, it's to no practical avail because you can't plan a future if you're 70 and she's 22. So your flirtation life goes, which is a big part of everybody's enjoyment in life."


Explains a lot about that Soon-Yi Previn thing. And there's more godlessness, deep depression and hopelessness in this Washington Post interview.

Yep, she's nuts

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 26, 2006

A jury in the retrial of Andrea Yates today found her not guilty by reason of insanity:
 

The jury had spent 11 hours Monday and Tuesday trying to determine if Yates was legally insane. Wednesday morning, they reviewed the state's definition of insanity and then asked to see a family photo and candid pictures of the five smiling youngsters. After about an hour of deliberations, they said they had reached a verdict.


So they looked at the picture, looked at the definition, and decided she was out of her mind? There does have to be something wrong -- either insanity or the presence of Satan himself -- in order for someone to kill her five children.

In New York, of all places

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 26, 2006

A redevelopment agency created to help rebuild part of New York City after the World Trade Center was destroyed says its work is almost done, and will soon fade into non-existence.
 

Stefan Pryor, the president of the (Lower Manhattan Development Corporation) and its first employee, said its role as a planning and financing body was always intended to be temporary. “The greatest accomplishment of a public agency such as ours is to successfully work itself out of existence,” he said.


How often do you see that, so willfully? Never
here, that I know of.

Wishing well

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 25, 2006

David Bauder, The Associated Press's media reporter, says Fox News' public relations is a contact sport. He's right and they're funny.

Even better than Condi

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 25, 2006

In an interview with a clearly liberal reporter from Der Spiegel, Israel's foreign minister Tzipi Livni provides a clear, no-nonsense defense for her country's military actions in Lebanon:
 

SPIEGEL: What is the goal of the military action?

Tzipi Livni: It's not only about the goal of the military action but about the demands of the international community that we explicitly share. They are: there must be a government and an army in Lebanon. There can no longer be militias and terrorist organizations such as Hezbollah. Hezbollah must be completely disarmed. They should no longer have the ability to be armed by Syria and Iran. In southern Lebanon there can be no more Hezbollah bases. The Lebanese army must be stationed there in its place. The global community a while ago demanded that the Lebanese government fulfill its responsibilities. It hasn't yet done so.

SPIEGEL: The complicated political situation in Lebanon makes the Lebanese government extremely weak. How can they be held fully responsible for Hezbollah's violent acts under these conditions?

Livni: Whether weak or strong, a government carries the responsibility for whatever happens within its country. We are currently considering the question of whether we must strengthen the Lebanese government from the outside so that it would be able to fulfill its responsibilities.


More kick-a-- comments therein.

Naming rights

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 24, 2006

Rock expert Drew Cline, writing for American Spectator, thinks the "Big Dig" needs a new name.

One street, two names

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 24, 2006

Friday it was misheard lyrics; today it's misspelled signs, in a N&O story about how some streets in the area are marked with grammatically challenged posts ("Russling Leaf" not "Rustling Leaf", etc.)

I have a contribution to the list from my own neighborhood. On one corner of a nearby street the name is "Zachary Way." At the next corner it's "Zackary Way." I still don't know which is correct, but I assume it's the former.

Nuptials not necessary in NC

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 20, 2006

You may cohabit now.

Throwback to Hollywood's Golden Age

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 20, 2006

He gives away too much of the story, but Cal Thomas says Oliver Stone's "World Trade Center" is "one of the greatest pro-American, pro-family, pro-faith, pro-male, flag-waving, God Bless America films you will ever see."

Yes, that Oliver Stone.

'Ashamed to be French'

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 20, 2006

It's not who you might think (are those really her teeth?) or for the reasons you might think.

I'm going to blog this blog about bloggers

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 20, 2006

All you ever wanted to know about the blogosphere.

By the way, did you ever notice it only takes one mis-typed letter and they become booggers?

World Court judges

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 19, 2006

For anyone suffering "American Idol" withdrawal, the show's panelists have taken on a summer project.

MS, food and guns don't mix

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 19, 2006

Sad story.

Zoning for Bible classes

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 18, 2006

A D.C.-area megachurch is suing Fairfax County, Va., so it can continue to hold classes on Christianity. The county says McLean Bible Church must get permission to operate as a college.

Drinkin' buddies and the earth's rotation

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 14, 2006

Why NASA's major sites are located in hurricane-prone areas.

Surprise, surprise

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 13, 2006

The U.N. Security Council has weighed in against Israel in the current outbreak of war. Thank God for U.S. veto power.

Tell me again why we have any respect for, or participation in, this abominable organization?

One reason unemployment will never be zero

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 12, 2006

Because of people like Corey Branch.

We all want to change the world

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 7, 2006

Wonder how today's New York Times might have covered the American Revolution? Former Carolina Journal editor Drew Cline has some ideas.

Lighting and lotteries

Posted by Paul Chesser, July 7, 2006

Some say you are as likely to win the lottery as you are to get struck by lightning. But what are the odds of getting hit by both?

Not grudgingly

Posted by Paul Chesser, June 28, 2006

In response to John Hood's column today, even God doesn't believe in coercive contributions (2 Corinthians 9:7).

Dollars for Dollar

Posted by Paul Chesser, June 25, 2006

"God will make you rich" televangelist Creflo Dollar drew thousands to the RBC Center this weekend.

Governor's School update

Posted by Paul Chesser, June 23, 2006

After being threatened with legal action yesterday by the Alliance Defense Fund, a deputy attorney general who handles affairs for the Department of Public Instruction told the organization that "American History X" would not be shown at Governor's School West last night.

Need a homophobe? I'm your man<