Monday, March 31, 2008

Bush Murdered in Hamas TV Puppet Show

Jimmy Carter really should talk to his Hamas buddies and convince them to start producing more positive, less violent TV programming for children.

Last year, a tape surfaced of Hamas' program using a Mickey Mouse look-alike named Farfur to indoctrinate children.

Here's another bit of Hamas TV for kids:




MEMRI provides a transcript:
Child Stabs President Bush to Death and Turns the White House into a Mosque in a Hamas TV Puppet Show

Following is an excerpt from a puppet show, which aired on Al-Aqsa TV on March 30, 2008.

Bush: Who are you? What brings you to my home? How did they let you in, boy? My guards! My soldiers! Get this boy out of here.

Child: Nobody will take me out of here.

Bush: Who are you to come here and threaten me?! You are on my own turf, you little child, you! Get out. My dear, bring your father, your grandfather, or your mother, so I can talk to them. Get somebody older and smarter than you. What, you came here on your own?

Child: You killed daddy in the Iraq war. It's true, you killed him in the Iraq war. As for my mom – you and the criminal Zionists killed her in Lebanon. You and the criminal Zionists also killed my younger and older brothers in the Gaza holocaust. I'm an orphan, you criminal!

Bush: What are you talking about? Where did you come from? Don't I have enough troubles already? Where did you come from?

Child: I have come to take revenge with this sword – revenge for my mother and my sisters. You are a criminal, Bush! You are despicable. You made me an orphan! You took everything from me, Bush! I must take revenge on you, with this sword of Islam, the Prophet's Al-Battar sword.

Bush: No... No, my dear. I give you my word that this is it. I repent, just don't kill me. Where are my guards? Where are my people? Help! Help! He wants to kill me. Help!

Child: There are no guards, and your people have surrendered, Bush. I have not come alone, Bush. I have brought thousands of thousands of children from Palestine, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, and Afghanistan. You have denied all these children their fathers and mothers. That's why I have come to take revenge on you and on all the criminal traitors who collaborated with you.

Bush: Okay, fine, that's enough. I will give you whatever you want from me.

Child: What can you give me? All I want is one thing. Bring back my father and mother. I don't want anything from you. I don't want anything from you, just bring back my father and mother. I place my trust in Allah. I need to kill you.

Bush: No, my dear. Enough. I will give you anything you want. I also... Enough with that. Come with all your friends to the White House. I will give you food and toys. We will sit in the White House and talk. You will get whatever you need.

Child: You are impure, Bush, so you are not allowed inside the White House.

Bush: What are you saying?! Why am I not allowed into the White House?

Child: Because it has been turned into a great mosque for the nation of Islam. I will kill you just like Mu'az killed Abu Lahab. I will kill you, Bush, because that is your fate.

Child stabs Bush repeatedly

Child: Ahhh, I killed him.

And that's how you raise the next generation of terrorists.

It's sick, and very sad.

Child Neglect and Easter Baskets

UDPATE, April 28, 2008: Parents in diabetes case charged
The parents of an 11-year-old girl who died of complications from untreated diabetes last month have both been charged with second-degree reckless homicide, according to Marathon County District Attorney Jill Falstad.

...In a statement released at a 1 p.m. news conference, Falstad said the parents' actions meet the standard of the charges.

"Second-degree reckless homicide has two elements," Falstad said. "The first element is that the defendant caused the death of another. The second element is that the defendant caused the death by criminally reckless conduct.

"In this case, that conduct was the failure to seek medical intervention. The failure to seek medical intervention created unreasonable and substantial risk of death or great bodily harm to Kara and the Neumanns were aware of the risk."


_______________


A father is in trouble, facing possible charges for leaving his young daughters inside a car while he shopped at Wal-Mart to pick up Easter baskets and candy.

From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

The Milwaukee County District Attorney's Office is considering whether to file charges against a Muskego man who allegedly left his daughters, ages 5 and 3, inside his car in the parking lot of a Greenfield Wal-Mart for at least 20 minutes on a cold day last month, according to an incident report filed by a Greenfield police officer.

According to the report:

Greenfield police were called to the parking lot of the store at 4500 S. 108th St. about 10:51 p.m. March 22 to check on two children who had been left unattended in a Honda Accord.

The responding officer saw the children in the back seat of the car and noticed the car's rear windows were fogged.

The officer opened the unlocked driver's door and asked the girls who they were with at the store. The older sister, whose breath was visible as she spoke, told the officer that their father had left them in the car when he went into the store.

The older girl estimated that she and her sister had been in the car about as long as an episode of "Barney and Friends," but not as long as an episode of "Sesame Street."

...As the officer was talking with the girls, their father, 25, came back to the car. He insisted the car's doors had been locked and said he had left the girls in the car because he wanted to surprise them by buying Easter baskets and gifts.

The father estimated he had been in the store for about 10 minutes, but a man who was parked nearby told police the girls had been inside the car for at least 20 minutes before the officer arrived.

TMJ4 has some additional details:
25 year old Jordan Ebbott is facing the possibility of child neglect charges after leaving his three and five year old daughters in a car in the Walmart parking lot here.

...“We have a nine month old yellow lab puppy,” explained Ebbott’s stepfather, Bob Rose. “The dog got into the candy and now there was no candy for his two little daughters.”

Rose went on to say that his stepson is a “good father” and didn’t want to disappoint his daughters on Easter morning.

...The Milwaukee County District Attorney’s sensitive crimes unit is considering what, if any, charges to bring against Ebbott. But the unit is awaiting a report from the Bureau of Child Welfare. The case will be reviewed again on May 2nd.

It appears that Ebbott's intentions were good. And thankfully, his daughters weren't harmed as a result of being left alone in the car.

But, under no circumstances does one leave a 5- and a 3-year-old unattended in a car, especially at around 11:00PM.

The girls should have been in their beds sleeping at that hour, not waiting in a cold car in a dark parking lot.

Ebbott had other options. He could have had someone, like his step-father, stay with the girls while he ran out for the Easter treats. If that couldn't happen, then Ebbott could have gone out early the next morning. Or, he could have asked his mother or step-father to shop for him.

The "dog ate it" excuse sounds a little weird. In any event, children that young should not be left alone in a car. Period.

So, the case will be reviewed again at the beginning of May, and Ebbott will learn what, if any, charges he will face.

Compare this case with what happened to 11-year-old Madeline Kara Neumann.

Kara died from complications of untreated diabetes because her parents chose to pray for her to be healed rather than seek medical care for their daughter.

From the Wausau Daily Herald:

It will be Wednesday or Thursday before the Everest Metro Police Department completes its investigation of the sudden death of an 11-year-old girl, Chief Dan Vergin said [Monday] afternoon.

Vergin said last week the case could be forwarded to the Marathon County district attorney’s office today to determine if criminal charges would be filed in the death of Madeline Kara Neumann. Investigators now want to conduct more interviews and corroborate some information before that happens, Vergin said.

There's no question that Ebbott used very poor judgment when he left his little girls unattended in the car for about 20 minutes. I think some sort of charge or citation is in order.

I'm not excusing Ebbott, but the lapse in judgment that he displayed is in a completely different league than Dale and Leilani Neumann's failure to get their daughter to a doctor when it was clear that she was seriously ill.

These two cases are similar in that the issue is child neglect. In Ebbott's case, something could have happened to the girls when he briefly left them alone, but nothing did. In the Neumanns' case, their neglect resulted in death. Their daughter died because of their choice to try to pray her back to health.

There's something very wrong with our criminal justice system if Ebbott is charged for what he did and the Neumanns are given a free pass for their actions because their neglect stemmed from practicing religious beliefs.

Adults must held responsible for properly caring for their children. Exercising one's religion should not provide an excuse for allowing a child die.

Tomah High School Student's Artwork Censored

A Tomah High School student was punished by his teacher because he had the audacity to include an image deemed objectionable in a drawing he made as an assignment for an art class.

His drawing included a cross.

GASP!



A copy of a drawing by a Tomah High School student, provided by the Alliance Defense Fund, features religious images.
MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- A Tomah High School student has filed a federal lawsuit alleging his art teacher censored his drawing because it featured a cross and a biblical reference.

The lawsuit alleges other students were allowed to draw "demonic" images and asks a judge to declare a class policy prohibiting religion in art unconstitutional.

"We hear so much today about tolerance," said David Cortman, an attorney with the Alliance Defense Fund, a Christian legal advocacy group representing the student. "But where is the tolerance for religious beliefs? The whole purpose of art is to reflect your own personal experience. To tell a student his religious beliefs can legally be censored sends the wrong message."

...According to the lawsuit, the student's art teacher asked his class in February to draw landscapes. The student, a senior identified in the lawsuit by the initials A.P., added a cross and the words "John 3:16 A sign of love" in his drawing.

His teacher, Julie Millin, asked him to remove the reference to the Bible, saying students were making remarks about it. He refused, and she gave him a zero on the project.

Millin showed the student a policy for the class that prohibited any violence, blood, sexual connotations or religious beliefs in artwork. The lawsuit claims Millin told the boy he had signed away his constitutional rights when he signed the policy at the beginning of the semester.

The boy tore the policy up in front of Millin, who kicked him out of class. Later that day, assistant principal Cale Jackson told the boy his religious expression infringed on other students' rights.

Jackson told the boy, his stepfather and his pastor at a meeting a week later that religious expression could be legally censored in class assignments. Millin stated at the meeting the cross in the drawing also infringed on other students' rights.

The boy received two detentions for tearing up the policy. Jackson referred questions about the lawsuit to Gaarder.

Sometime after that meeting, the boy's metals teacher rejected his idea to build a chain-mail cross, telling him it was religious and could offend someone, the lawsuit claims. The boy decided in March to shelve plans to make a pin with the words "pray" and "praise" on it because he was afraid he'd get a zero for a grade.

The lawsuit also alleges school officials allow other religious items and artwork to be displayed on campus.

A Buddha and Hindu figurines are on display in a social studies classroom, the lawsuit claims, adding the teacher passionately teaches Hindu principles to students.

In addition, a replica of Michaelangelo's "The Creation of Man" is displayed at the school's entrance, a picture of a six-limbed Hindu deity is in the school's hallway and a drawing of a robed sorcerer hangs on a hallway bulletin board.

Drawings of Medusa, the Grim Reaper with a scythe and a being with a horned head and protruding tongue hang in the art room and demonic masks are displayed in the metals room, the lawsuit alleges.

A.P. suffered unequal treatment because of his religion even though student expression is protected by the First Amendment, according to the lawsuit, which was filed Friday.

A.P. was out of line when he ripped up the policy in front of art teacher Julie Millin, even if she may have taunted him by claiming he had signed away his constitutional rights.

In any case, that was not the proper way for A.P. to handle the dispute.

At least from the information provided in this article, my criticism of A.P. pretty much ends there.


It sounds like Millin and assistant principal Cale Jackson weren't willing to give an inch. This notion that the cross infringed on other students' rights is absolutely ridiculous.


Why would they care about A.P.'s drawing? Are they so fragile that they can't handle viewing a landscape that includes a cross?

Of course not.


I think it's ludicrous to claim that the image of a cross in any way infringed on other students' rights.

Does anyone really think that a student's drawing of something that benign in art class would be treading on the rights of others?

That's nuts.

Art is about creativity and personal expression. While I can understand the school's prohibition of violent, bloody images, I can't understand getting bent out of shape over a cross, or a Star of David, or symbols of other religions.

If as the lawsuit claims religious items and artwork are displayed at the school, then the school's reaction to A.P.'s drawing seems far too heavy-handed and terribly inconsistent.

It appears to be very selective religious censorship. Moreover, there's a problem with a school policy that equates graphic depictions of violence with religious symbols in artwork.




With such a rigid policy on religious symbols it would be nearly impossible for students to tour an art museum.

According to Tomah High School's Course Description Booklet:

The main goal of the Art Department is to provide a variety of visual experiences for the student to relate art to his/her own experiences and culture.

If that's the main goal of the Art Department, then Millin is failing as a teacher. She's actively preventing A.P. from relating his artistic expression to his "own experiences and culture."



I wonder how Millin would have reacted if A.P. drew inspiration for his project from Piss Christ, Andres Serrano's photograph of a crucifix submerged in his own urine.



In that case, would she have defended A.P.'s right to express himself and relate his art to his own experiences and culture?

Limp-Wristed, Inexperienced Obama Needs Bumpers

NO HE CAN'T.

Barack Obama can't bowl. Campaigning in Altoona, Pennsylvania, Obama displayed a remarkble lack of skill.


ALTOONA, Pa. -- While Democrats increasingly worry about winning ugly, Barack Obama was losing gracefully at a bowling lane in Altoona.

"My economic plan is better than my bowling," Obama told fellow bowlers Saturday.

"It has to be," a man called out.

Obama let everyone know he hadn't bowled since Jimmy Carter was president -- and finished with a score of 37. A perfect game is 300.

37!

That is not good.

See Obama bowl:



Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama D-Ill., bowls at Pleasant Valley Recreation Center in Altoona, Pa., Saturday, March 29, 2008. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)


(AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

He looks as comfortable bowling as John Kerry looked hunting.



It could be that Obama had problems because his shoes were uncomfortable. They don't look like your typical pair of rentals to me.



Those are stiff, new shoes. That may have hurt his performance.

It's also possible that Obama bowled so poorly because he is limp-wristed.


See?


Democratic presidential hopeful, Sen. Barack Obama D-Ill., shakes hands after bowling at Pleasant Valley Recreation Center in Altoona, Pa., Saturday, March 29, 2008. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

I think the real problem is Obama lacks experience.

He needs bumpers. They aren't just for kids.


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If Obama had bumpers, he'd be ready on day one!

Barack Obama: Of Babies and Punishment

I am so sick of hearing that Barack Obama can unite the country. He can bring everyone together. He transcends our divisions. Blah, blah, blah.

Listen up! Listen to what Obama says!

From Ben Smith:


Opponents of Obama's plan are expected to jump on a quote from his Q and A session in Johnstown, Pa., yesterday.

Politico’s Carrie Budoff Brown reports that it followed “Obama's earlier comments that he does not favor abstinence-only education but, rather, comprehensive sexual education that includes information on abstinence and birth control.”

“Look, I got two daughters — 9 years old and 6 years old," Obama said. "I am going to teach them first about values and morals, but if they make a mistake, I don't want them punished with a baby. I don't want them punished with an STD at age 16, so it doesn't make sense to not give them information."

Anti-abortion leaders will be encouraged to make the “punished with a baby” part famous.

"Punished with a baby"?

My question is: What kind of values and morals does Obama plan on teaching his daughters?


It doesn't sound like he values human life, certainly not the life of the unborn.


A baby, a human life, is never a mistake. A baby is not a punishment.

If his daughters have unplanned pregnancies, the moral thing to do is not to kill the babies. If they don't want to love and care for their "mistakes," they should give up their "mistakes" and allow someone else adopt them, to love and care for them.

Every baby is wanted by someone.

__________________

Read more about Barack Obama and abortion.

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Nan Hegerty's Discrimination Suit

Was former Milwaukee Police Chief Nan Hegerty a victim of gender discrimination?

From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

Milwaukee's first female police chief contends that she was discriminated against when the Fire and Police Commission chose to pay her successor a higher salary than she received.

Nannette Hegerty filed a gender discrimination complaint with the Equal Rights Division of the Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development this month, Assistant City Attorney Don Schriefer said Sunday.

At stake could be thousands of dollars of back pay as well as a boost to Hegerty's pension, which is based on her last three years of salary.

Schriefer is investigating Hegerty's complaint for the city.

He said the differences between Hegerty's background when she became chief in 2003 and that of current Chief Edward Flynn should disprove her claims of discrimination.

"From the little bit I know of the case so far, I should probably be able to demonstrate there is no discrimination here," Schriefer said.

Hegerty's attorney, John Fuchs, could not be reached Sunday. Mayor Tom Barrett's chief of staff, Patrick Curley, declined to comment. WTMJ-TV (Channel 4) first broke news of the claim Sunday morning.

Hegerty is the second Milwaukee police chief who has pursued legal action against the city.

Arthur Jones, the city's first permanent African-American police chief, filed a racial discrimination complaint against the city with the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in 2002. That grew into two lawsuits filed in 2004, after Jones lost a bid for mayor.

Hegerty came to the chief's job after serving as U.S. marshal in the eastern district of Wisconsin. She left earning a salary of $132,544.

Flynn was hired last year after 20 years as police chief of five different departments. Flynn's salary of $143,881 is 8.5% higher than what Hegerty made, but less than the $155,000 he received in his previous position as police commissioner for Springfield, Mass.

Although Hegerty might have had managerial experience as a marshal, she had not served as a police chief before, Schriefer said.

Pay for the new police chief was hotly contested by the Milwaukee Common Council when it voted in November to raise salaries for the mayor, council and aldermen and thereby allow the Fire and Police Commission to approve the chief's salary at any level below the mayor's pay. Otherwise, the commission would have needed council approval to pay more than $127,175 a year, something it had done for the past three police chiefs, including Hegerty.

So we have another ex-police chief filing suit against Milwaukee for discrimination.

When Arthur Jones cried discrimination, both his suits were dismissed.

Now, Hegerty is following in his footsteps and making a fool of herself, too.

It's a mistake for Hegerty to claim gender discrimination by comparing her salary with that of current police chief Ed Flynn.

She and Flynn are apples and oranges.

Hegerty is kidding herself if she believes that she was paid less because of her gender.

At best, Hegerty was a mediocre chief. Given her prior experience and her performance as police chief, I think she was overpaid.

Remembering Terri Schiavo


Theresa Marie Schindler Schiavo
December 3, 1963 - March 31, 2005


Today marks the third anniversary of Terri Schiavo's death.

She died after her family lost a prolonged, contentious battle for her right to live. Terri's parents, Mary and Bob Schindler, and her siblings, Suzanne and Bobby, lost a beloved daughter and sister.

What haunts me about Terri's death is that she was not terminally ill. She was not dying. Michael Schiavo successfully fought in court to have his wife starved and dehydrated to death. She was sentenced to die.

On
Nightline, March 15, 2005, while Michael Schiavo was on his media blitz to win over public opinion, he said:

"Terri will not be starved to death. Her nutrition and hydration will be taken away."


Unbelievable.


For me, that statement sums up the twisted lies of the Culture of Death proponents and the brutality of Terri's court-sanctioned murder.

There was so much disinformation disseminated about Terri's condition, before and after her death.

The Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation, a group dedicated to "Helping Families Fight for Those Who Cannot Fight for Themselves," provides straightforward answers to
frequently asked questions about Terri, her life and death.

These facts are important in understanding the wider social ramifications of Terri's death:

Was Terri dying?

No. Terri suffered from no terminal disease or condition and her cognitive disability did not jeopardize her life in any way. She was simply a physically healthy woman with a brain injury.

Was Terri brain dead or in a coma?

No. Brain death is not a catch phrase used to describe a persons condition but rather an authentic medical diagnosis determined when respiration and other reflexes are absent. Coma is a profound or deep state of unconsciousness. An individual in a state of coma is alive but unable to move or respond to his or her environment. Terri was neither brain dead, nor was she in a coma.

Were there any machines keeping Terri alive?

Absolutely not. Contrary to media reports, Terri did not require life sustaining equipment such as a ventilator. The only thing keeping Terri alive was the same thing that keeps every one of us alive – food and water.

Was this an “end-of-life” issue?

No. Terri’s case should not be confused with legitimate end-of-life cases in which patients are terminally ill and imminently dying. As already stated, Terri was neither ill nor dying.

Was Terri in a Persistent Vegetative State?

No. Despite Judge Greer’s ruling, and in keeping with the 40 medical affidavits submitted to the court, all evidence proves that Terri was not in a PVS. Terri’s behavior and ability to interact with her surroundings did not meet the medical or statutory definition of persistent vegetative state.

Did the autopsy prove that Terri was in a Persistent Vegetative State?

No. The autopsy was unable to determine whether or not Terri was actually in a persistent vegetative state. In fact, on three separate occasions, the report stated that an autopsy is unable to determine if a person is in a persistent vegetative state because the person must be alive in order to make such a diagnosis. The autopsy did prove that that, prior to Terri's death, she was physically healthy and would have lived a long life had she not been dehydrated over a period of two weeks.

Were Terri’s parents able to make any decisions regarding her medical care or well being?

No. From 1993 until her death, Terri’s parents were not allowed to participate in her care. As guardian, Michael Schiavo had 100% control over Terri. He refused to allow her parents to help their daughter in any way. In fact, during the final weeks of her life, Terri’s parents were informed that if they so much as tried to give her a drop of water, or provide comfort care in any way, they would be arrested by the armed police officers who guarded her room 24 hours a day.

Was Terri receiving any rehabilitation in the years prior to her death?

No. Terri was essentially warehoused and abandoned from 1992, when Michael Schiavo ordered all rehabilitation and therapy stopped, until her dehydration death in March of 2005. This was in spite of the fact that countless doctors said Terri’s condition could have improved with continued rehabilitation and therapy – and that her condition had been improving while she was receiving therapy.

Why did the court allow Terri to be killed?

Permission to starve and dehydrate Terri to death was granted based on hearsay evidence that surfaced almost eight years after her collapse, alleging that she wanted to die.

Did Terri have an advance directive?

No. Terri had no written advance directive that indicated her wishes. The court allowed her to be killed based only upon hearsay evidence provided by Michael Schiavo, his brother and his sister-in-law – ignoring testimony by Terri’s biological family and lifelong friends to the contrary.

Was there money involved?

Yes. A trust fund of nearly $800,000 was established and earmarked for Terri’s rehabilitation and therapy, with Michael as the inheritor in the case of Terri’s death. Tragically, the bulk of this money was instead used to pay Michael Schiavo’s attorney fees in his quest to end her life.

Did the court recognize the money Michael Schiavo stood to inherit as a conflict of interest?

No. In fact the court failed to acknowledge that not only was Schiavo’s monetary interest a conflict, but that he had moved on with his life, was engaged to be married to another woman, and already had children with the other woman. In short, his role as guardian was rife with conflicts of interest.

Did Terri have her own attorney?

No, she did not. In fact, the judge in this case defaulted as her guardian/attorney.

Was it appropriate for Congress to step in to assist in Terri’s case?

Absolutely. Congress has every right to pass laws that prevent the deaths of innocent persons.

Was this a private family matter?

No. Michael Schiavo chose to take the matter out of the realm of privacy by introducing it to the courts in 1998. It was Terri’s family who reached out to Congress for help in saving her life. Michael had essentially already started a new family with his fiancé and children.

What did the law passed by Congress actually do?

It gave Terri the right to a federal review – for a federal judge to make sure that her due process rights had not been denied. This is the same right given to all prisoners on death row.

After Terri died of dehydration on March 31, 2005, President George W. Bush remarked:
I urge all those who honor Terri Schiavo to continue to work to build a culture of life, where all Americans are welcomed and valued and protected, especially those who live at the mercy of others. The essence of civilization is that the strong have a duty to protect the weak. In cases where there are serious doubts and questions, the presumption should be in the favor of life.

In Terri's case, there were serious doubts and questions. Nonetheless, she was sentenced to death, an agonizingly slow-motion execution.

Just recently, on February 26, 2008 in Cleveland during a Democrat primary debate between Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, Obama invoked Terri Schiavo.

Nat Hentoff wrote a piece about that for Jewish World Review.

Today, the same piece, with slight alterations, appears in the Washington Times, "Playing games with innocent life."

Hentoff writes:

While Barack Obama is disengaging himself from some of the sulfurously disuniting remarks of his former pastor, Jeremiah Wright, he has shown in a February debate with Hillary Clinton — his own disturbing ignorance of why disability-rights communities across the nation so vigorously protested the official starvation and dehydration of disabled Terri Schiavo. I described this as "the longest public execution in American History."

When moderator Tim Russert asked Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Obama if "there are any words or votes that you'd like to take back... in your careers in public service," Mr. Obama answered that in his first year in the Senate, he joined an agreement "that allowed Congress to interject itself (in the Schiavo case) into the decision-making process of the families." Mr. Obama added: "I think that was a mistake, and I think the American people understood that was a mistake. And as a constitutional law professor, I knew better." When he was a professor of constitutional law, Mr. Obama probably instructed his students to research and know all the facts of a case.

The reason Congress asked the federal courts to review the Schiavo case was that the 41-year-old woman about to be dehydrated and starved to death was breathing normally on her own and was not terminal. There was medical evidence that she was responsive, not in a persistent vegetative state.

One of the leading congressional advocates of judicial review was staunchly liberal Sen. Tom Harkin, Iowa Democrat, because he is deeply informed about disability rights. By contrast, in all of this inflamed controversy, the mainstream media performed miserably, copying each other's errors instead of doing their own investigations of what Terri's wishes actually were. Consequently, most Americans did not know that 29 major national disability-rights organizations filed legal briefs and lobbied Congress to understand that this was not a right-to-die case, but one about the right to continue living.

Among them were: The National Spinal Cord Injury Association; the National Down Syndrome Congress; the World Association of Persons with Disabilities; Not Dead Yet; and the largest American assembly of disability-rights activists, the American Association of People with Disabilities. AAPD's head, Andrew J. Imparato, has testified before the Senate that: "When we start devaluing the lives of people with disabilities, we don't know where that's going to stop. You also need to take into account the financial implications of all of this. We have an economy that is not doing as well as it once was and... one way to save money is to make it easier for people with disabilities to die."

I recommend to Mr. Obama if he wants to make amends that he consult the disability-rights experts at Not Dead Yet for the facts of the Terri Schiavo case and its acute relevance to many Americans in similar situations. Not Dead Yet is about 12 miles from Chicago at 7521 Madison St., Forest Park, Ill.

If this presidential contender and former law professor had bothered to do his own research, he would have discovered as I did in four years of covering this story and interviewing participants, including neurologists, on both sides, that the husband of the brain-damaged Terri Schiavo, Michael Schiavo, had stopped testing and rehabilitation for her in 1993, 12 years before her death. Moreover, for years he had been living with another woman, with whom he had two children and has since married. Michael Schiavo has continually insisted that he succeeded in having Terri's feeding tube removed because he was respecting Terri's wishes, which she could no longer communicate, that she did not want to be kept alive by artificial means.

But at a January 2000 trial, as reported by Notre Dame Law School Professor O. Carter Snead in "Constitutional Quarterly" (published by the University of Minnesota Law School in its winter 2005 issue) five witnesses testified on whether Terri would have refused artificial nutrition, including water, in the condition she was in. Her mother and a close friend of Terri testified that she had said clearly she would want these essential life needs. The other three witnesses said Terri would have approved the removal of her feeding tube.

These last three were in alliance on what became a death penalty: Michael Schiavo, his brother and his sister-in-law. It was on the basis of that 3-to-2 vote that Florida state Judge George Greer ruled that "clear and convincing evidence" allowed him to remove her from life, and then 19 judges in six courts, including federal courts agreed. Like the press, those judges did no independent investigations of their own. And those careless judges are now joined by the equally irresponsible robot-like judgment of Sen. Barack Obama. He should be proud of the Senate vote he now recants and learn a lot more about the disabled.

So if Obama had the opportunity to take back a vote he cast in his years in public service, it would be the one he cast to offer a disabled woman the right to a federal review – for a federal judge to make sure that her due process rights had not been denied, the same right given to all prisoners on death row.

Obama said, "I think that was a mistake, and I think the American people understood that was a mistake. And as a constitutional law professor, I knew better."

Clearly, Obama is on the wrong side when it comes to promoting a Culture of Life and safeguarding the civil liberties of the weak.

Obama actually regrets voting to grant Terri the right to a federal review before being sentenced to death. He regrets having voted to support Terri's right to due process. I find that extremely troubling.

On WorldNetDaily, Diana Lynne reviews Terri's case and asks, "Did Terri die for the greater good?"

Lynne writes:

The Catholic Church teaches that evil and suffering in the world come about because of man's iniquities toward man. When God allows this evil and suffering to exist, He does so to accomplish a greater good.

What greater good does Terri's death serve? Schindler attorney David Gibbs believes it sent a "clarion call" to America to "adopt the heart of God toward the 'least of these,'" a reference to the biblical passage in the gospel of Matthew.

Put simply, Terri's death is a call to arms for the God-fearing to fend off the death grip secular humanists have on the weakest and most vulnerable among us.

The Schindler family has dedicated itself to this cause, establishing the Terri Schindler Schiavo Foundation to help people with disabilities and the incapacitated avoid tragedies that reflect what Terri endured.

Terri's dramatic experience deeply touched so many people, even though nearly all of us were witnesses from afar. For me, her story helped clarify the value of life and what I consider to be our moral obligation to protect the weak and disabled. Her devoted family's desire to care for her and their efforts to save her life were truly inspiring.

Terri's story is a lesson in love.

The struggle for life to prevail, when engulfed in a Culture of Death, is a challenging but morally imperative endeavor.

Although today is a sad day, we can honor Terri's memory by continuing to work to build a lasting Culture of Life; keeping in mind the words of Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martins, that "an attack against life is an attack against God."

On this third anniversary of Terri's death, I pray that her parents, her siblings, her other family members and her friends find comfort and peace knowing that while they can no longer hug Terri, she is embraced in God's arms.

____________________

Priests for Life invite you to join in saying the following novena prayer from March 31 to April 8 in honor of Terri:


Prayer in Remembrance of Terri Schiavo

Lord God, I thank you today for the gift of my life,
And for the lives of all my brothers and sisters.

I know that life is always a good,
and that it never loses its value
when it is beset by weakness or injury.

Lord, thank you for the life of Terri Schindler-Schiavo.
Even in her suffering and death
She revealed Your glory
and truth that life is always sacred.

As I remember Terri, I also commit myself
to be active in the pro-life movement,
And never to stop defending life
Until all my brothers and sisters are protected,

And our nation once again becomes
A nation with liberty and justice
Not just for some, but for all,
Through Christ our Lord. Amen!


___________________

Read "Terri Schiavo: My Sister's Regret," by Bobby Schindler.
Recently, and for the second time in less than a year, presidential candidate Senator Barack Obama stated that his greatest regret as a Senator was not objecting to a vote that was intended to help save my sister from being dehydrated to death.

Senator Obama went so far as to say that this type of “inaction” (failure to speak out against the Senate’s unanimous consent to allow Terri the same due process allowed the most vicious of criminals) can sometimes prove to be just as costly as taking action. One has to wonder what could possibly have been “more costly” than the loss of innocent human life.

At a Democratic rally in Florida in February 2006, Senator Hillary Clinton scolded the Republicans in an effort to single them out for intervening in Terri’s situation, even though the effort to save her passed the Senate with bi-partisan support.

In an August 2006 interview with Esquire Magazine, Senator John McCain said the following: “I understand the frustrations a lot of Republicans feel. We’re not representing their hopes and dreams and aspirations. We worry about Ms. Schiavo before we worry about balancing the budget.”

One of these candidates will be our next President, and the fact that they can make such statements with little to no fanfare from our secular media, or any noticeable outrage from the general public, is a chilling reminder of how far we have drifted as a nation.

...March 31st will mark the third anniversary of my sister’s brutal death. Sadly, it is a day that reminds me of what our nation has become, bringing back horrible images of a hideously inhumane death and how the judge who sentenced Terri to die also, in essence, sentenced my parents to death with her.

Senator Obama said that his biggest regret was allowing Congress to try to help my sister. I wish I could ask Terri about her biggest regret, because as things turned out I’m certain that hers would have been that she was born in an America where life is no longer viewed as precious and worthy of protection.

As I think about the future of our nation I can’t help but remember the words of one of our founding fathers, Thomas Jefferson: “The care of human life and happiness and not their destruction is the first and only legitimate object of good government.”

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Endorses Walker

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Editorial Board believes in Scott Walker.
Walker for another term

Four years ago, we recommended Scott Walker for re-election as Milwaukee County executive. Despite differences, we concluded that he had done a solid job and deserved a full term.

If anything, our differences with Walker today are more numerous and, overall, more sharply drawn.

We're again recommending Walker in Tuesday's election. This time, however, our support is much more qualified.

...Taylor is an intelligent and capable opponent who has compellingly called into question Walker's insistence on holding the line on taxes while county services have suffered. Born and raised in Milwaukee, Taylor, an attorney and former businesswoman, is passionate about her hometown, and it comes through loud and clear. And as a legislator and member of the Joint Finance Committee, she obviously can handle challenges.

But the senator has failed in this campaign to demonstrate the necessary grasp of county government that a politically experienced challenger should possess. She has failed to detail possible solutions and commit herself to them.

Taylor has taken Walker to task for refusing to even consider an increase in the 0.5% county sales tax for parks or transit. But she then backpedals - saying she would first look to root out waste and inefficiencies. This is practically the same rationale used by Walker.

Absent these critical considerations, we cannot recommend her over Walker. Given our differences with Walker, we wish we could.

...Foremost, the job of county executive is about administering a municipal corporation with a budget of $1.3 billion. Walker has shown over the past six years that he understands the CEO role. Unlike his opponent, he brings seasoning and experience to a task that will only become more difficult as the economy sours and revenue tightens. Under these circumstances, it's simply best not to change leadership.

It's kind of funny that the Board actually admits, "[W]e cannot recommend [Taylor] over Walker. Given our differences with Walker, we wish we could."

I doubt that Taylor and her supporters find comfort in those words.

The Board seems to be apologizing to its lib readers.

The libs must feel betrayed by the Journal Sentinel, because the paper so rarely breaks ranks.

I think the Journal Sentinel Editorial Board must be weighed down with guilt for abandoning Taylor. Although it attacks Walker, that doesn't take the sting out of the Journal Sentinel deeming him to be the better choice for county executive.

Charges for Dale and Leilani Neumann?

UDPATE, April 28, 2008: Parents in diabetes case charged
The parents of an 11-year-old girl who died of complications from untreated diabetes last month have both been charged with second-degree reckless homicide, according to Marathon County District Attorney Jill Falstad.

...In a statement released at a 1 p.m. news conference, Falstad said the parents' actions meet the standard of the charges.

"Second-degree reckless homicide has two elements," Falstad said. "The first element is that the defendant caused the death of another. The second element is that the defendant caused the death by criminally reckless conduct.

"In this case, that conduct was the failure to seek medical intervention. The failure to seek medical intervention created unreasonable and substantial risk of death or great bodily harm to Kara and the Neumanns were aware of the risk."


_______________

The investigation into the death of Madeline Kara Neumann continues.
WAUSAU, Wis. (AP) -- Police are still reviewing the diabetes death of an 11-year-old rural Weston girl whose parents tried to heal her with prayer instead of taking her to the doctor.

Madeline Neumann died last Sunday of the undiagnosed by treatable condition.

...Everest Metro Police Chief Dan Vergin says he expects to have his investigation done Monday or Tuesday and then send the information to the district attorney.

The chief says he won't make any recommendation on charges, leaving that up to the D.A.

The story of Kara Neumann's came to mind when I read this story about a 15-month-old's death:
A grand jury indicted an Oregon City couple accused of failing to seek medical treatment for their gravely ill daughter who died this month.

Carl Worthington, 28, and Raylene Worthington, 25, surrendered late Friday to face charges of manslaughter and criminal mistreatment, said Detective Jim Strovink of the Clackamas County Sheriff's Office.

They were held on $250,000 bail each and their first court appearance was scheduled for Monday afternoon.

The couple's daughter, 15-month-old Ava, died at home March 2 from bacterial bronchial pneumonia and infection. A deputy state medical examiner said Ava's medical problems were treatable with antibiotics.

The Worthingtons belong to Oregon City's Followers of Christ Church. According to church tradition, when members become ill, fellow worshippers pray and anoint them with oil.

Dozens of children have been buried in the parish cemetery over the past 50 years, and a 1998 analysis by The Oregonian newspaper found that many of the deaths could have prevented with medical care.

The 1999 Oregon Legislature eliminated the state's "spiritual-healing defense" in cases of second-degree manslaughter, first- and second-degree criminal mistreatment and nonpayment of child support. Legislators were prompted by the death of 11-year-old Oregon City boy whose diabetes was left untreated. His parents were members of the Followers of Christ Church.

I think the Oregon Legislature got it right.

Practicing one's religion should not be considered an excuse for endangering the life of another person, especially in the case of a parent neglecting a child.

McCain Girls

EARTH HOUR: LET THERE BE DARK

Will you be observing the Second Annual Earth Hour today at 8:00PM?
On March 29, 2008 at 8 p.m., join millions of people around the world in making a statement about climate change by turning off your lights for Earth Hour, an event created by the World Wildlife Fund.

Earth Hour was created by WWF in Sydney, Australia in 2007, and in one year has grown from an event in one city to a global movement. In 2008, millions of people, businesses, governments and civic organizations in nearly 200 cities around the globe will turn out for Earth Hour. More than 100 cities across North America will participate, including the US flagships–Atlanta, Chicago, Phoenix and San Francisco and Ottawa, Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver.

We invite everyone throughout North America and around the world to turn off the lights for an hour starting at 8 p.m. (your own local time)–whether at home or at work, with friends and family or solo, in a big city or a small town.

What will you do when the lights are off? We have lots of ideas.

Join people all around the world in showing that you care about our planet and want to play a part in helping to fight climate change. Don’t forget to sign up and let us know you want to join Earth Hour.

One hour, America. Earth Hour. Turn out for Earth Hour!

According to WWF:
Earth Hour is a global event created to symbolize that each one of us, working together, can make a positive impact on climate change - no matter who we are or where we live.

Created by WWF in Sydney, Australia in 2007, Earth Hour has grown from a single event into a global movement. In 2008, millions of people, businesses, governments and civic organizations in nearly 200 cities around the globe will turn out for Earth Hour. More than 35 US cities will participate, including the US flagships--Atlanta, Chicago, Phoenix and San Francisco.

When I hear "WWF," I still think of the World Wrestling Federation rather than the World Wildlife Fund.

Does that mean I'm not green enough?

Here's an AP report on how Earth Hour passed in Sydney:

Sydney's iconic Opera House and Harbour Bridge went dark Saturday night as the world's first major city turned off its lights for this year's Earth Hour, a global campaign to raise awareness of climate change.

A lightning show was the brightest part of Sydney's skyline during Earth Hour, which began at 8 p.m. when the lights were turned off at the city's landmarks. Most businesses and homes were already dark as Sydney residents embraced their second annual Earth Hour with candlelight dinners, beach bonfires and even a green-powered outdoor movie.

"This provides an extraordinary symbol and an indication that we can be part of the solution" to global warming, Australian Environment Minister Peter Garrett told Sky News television, standing across the harbor from the dark silhouette of the Opera House.

Garrett said government offices and national monuments around the country participated in Earth Hour.

"We're not only talking the talk, we're walking the walk," he said as the hour ended. "Whatever your view is about the magnitude of the problem ... we can save money by using energy wisely and efficiently, and that gives us the added bonus of reduced greenhouse gas emissions."

During the one-hour event, Sydney was noticeably darker, though it was not a complete blackout. The business district was mostly dark; organizers said 250 of the 350 commercial buildings there had pledged to shut off their lights completely, and 94 of the top 100 companies on the Australian stock exchange were also participating.

The number of participants was not immediately available but organizers were hoping to beat last year's debut, when 2.2 million people and more than 2,000 businesses shut off lights and appliances, resulting in a 10.2 percent reduction in carbon emissions during that hour.

"I'm putting my neck on the line but my hope is that we top 100 million people," Earth Hour Australia chief executive Greg Bourne said.

The effect of last year's Earth Hour was infectious. This year 26 major world cities and more than 300 other cities and towns have signed up to participate.

Here's a list of the business supporters of Earth Hour in Wisconsin:
Healing Muscle Therapies - Racine, WI

Inner Sun Yoga Studo - Oshkosh, WI

Interfaith Community for the Earth - Stevens Point, WI

Jungian Analyst - Milwaukee, WI

Kenosha Moms Network - Kenosha, WI

Leadership Academy Martial Arts - Woodruff, WI

Well, it's not as dramatic as the Syndey Opera House going dark, but it's a start, I guess.

Check out Google:



Google Users in the United States will notice today that we "turned the lights out" on the Google.com homepage as a gesture to raise awareness of a worldwide energy conservation effort called Earth Hour. As to why we don't do this permanently - it saves no energy; modern displays use the same amount of power regardless of what they display. However, you can do something to reduce the energy consumption of your home PC by joining the Climate Savers Computing Initiative.

On Saturday, March 29, 2008, Earth Hour invites people around the world to turn off their lights for one hour – from 8:00pm to 9:00pm in their local time zone. On this day, cities around the world, including Copenhagen, Chicago, Melbourne, Dubai, and Tel Aviv, will hold events to acknowledge their commitment to energy conservation.

Given our company's commitment to environmental awareness and energy efficiency, we strongly support the Earth Hour campaign, and have darkened our homepage today to help spread awareness of what we hope will be a highly successful global event.

That's sort of funny.

"As to why we don't do this permanently - it saves no energy; modern displays use the same amount of power regardless of what they display."

Of course, these sort of events are meant to raise awareness and not really have an impact in themselves.

Remember Al Gore's Live Earth concerts, July 7, 2007?


Live Earth is promoting green to save the planet - what planet are they on?
The Live Earth event is, in the words of one commentator: "a massive, hypocritical fraud".

For while the organisers' commitment to save the planet is genuine, the very process of putting on such a vast event, with more than 150 performers jetting around the world to appear in concerts from Tokyo to Hamburg, is surely an exercise in hypocrisy on a grand scale.

Matt Bellamy, front man of the rock band Muse, has dubbed it 'private jets for climate change'.

A Daily Mail investigation has revealed that far from saving the planet, the extravaganza will generate a huge fuel bill, acres of garbage, thousands of tonnes of carbon emissions, and a mileage total equal to the movement of an army.

The most conservative assessment of the flights being taken by its superstars is that they are flying an extraordinary 222,623.63 miles between them to get to the various concerts - nearly nine times the circumference of the world. The true environmental cost, as they transport their technicians, dancers and support staff, is likely to be far higher.

The total carbon footprint of the event, taking into account the artists' and spectators' travel to the concert, and the energy consumption on the day, is likely to be at least 31,500 tonnes of carbon emissions, according to John Buckley of Carbonfootprint.com, who specialises in such calculations.

Throw in the television audience and it comes to a staggering 74,500 tonnes. In comparison, the average Briton produces ten tonnes in a year.

The concert will also generate some 1,025 tonnes of waste at the concert stadiums - much of which will go directly into landfill sites.

A massive global event to raise awareness about the impact that human beings have on the climate while actually adding to the alleged problem was such a joke!

Organizers claimed that the concerts would be as "green" as possible. Yeah, right. The concerts weren't going to be "green." Impossible.

But, it served to alleviate guilt I suppose, like the carbon offsets scam.

Doing something symbolic for an hour can make one feel good. Really making lifestyle changes requires so much effort.

So, between 8:00 and 9:00PM tonight, participate in Earth Hour, as a symbolic gesture. Then turn around and be an energy glutton after you're feeling good about yourself.

In my opinion, if you really are committed to the cause, you need to do much more than spend one hour in the dark.

If you really want to do your part, you could move in to a dramatically smaller home to reduce your energy consumption, drive a tiny car or ditch the car altogether, and conserve on toilet paper, as Sheryl Crow suggests. Go paperless, starting by cancelling your subscription to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel or any other newspaper you might still get. Cancel your magazine subscriptions if you have any.

And most importantly, reduce your carbon emissions dramatically by never exhaling ever again.

Friday, March 28, 2008

More Details on the Death of Madeline Kara Neumann

UDPATE, April 28, 2008: Parents in diabetes case charged
The parents of an 11-year-old girl who died of complications from untreated diabetes last month have both been charged with second-degree reckless homicide, according to Marathon County District Attorney Jill Falstad.

...In a statement released at a 1 p.m. news conference, Falstad said the parents' actions meet the standard of the charges.

"Second-degree reckless homicide has two elements," Falstad said. "The first element is that the defendant caused the death of another. The second element is that the defendant caused the death by criminally reckless conduct.

"In this case, that conduct was the failure to seek medical intervention. The failure to seek medical intervention created unreasonable and substantial risk of death or great bodily harm to Kara and the Neumanns were aware of the risk."


_______________

From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
A local police official said Friday that charges are possible against the parents of Madeline Kara Neumann, the 11-year-old girl who died of complications from untreated diabetes. "If we didn't believe at the end of our investigation there (would) be charges, then our investigation would have ended a lot sooner," Everest Metro Police Chief Dan Vergin said in an interview with the Journal Sentinel.

He said his department will likely complete its investigation by early next week and that ultimately it will be up to the Marathon County district attorney to determine what charges, if any, could be filed in a case that has received national attention.

"Our feeling is it was an unnecessary death," Vergin said. "After everything else is said and done, it was unnecessary for the 11-year-old to die. She could have easily been treated and had a long, loving life here on Earth."

Lesli Pluster, an assistant district attorney, said the case "is still considered under investigation."

...Earlier this week, police executed a search warrant on the Neumanns' home and took away medications, medical books, bedding, religious books, videos and pamphlets, as well as diaries and computer equipment.

Among the items taken by police from the home were eight Blue Cross HMO cards for the family, according to an inventory. The record didn't indicate whether the cards were still valid or had expired.

The book "Sovereign God," by David Eells, and several CDs by Eells were also taken. Eells is the founder of the Web site AmericasLastDays.com and Unleavened Bread Ministries. Leilani Neumann has written two posts on the Web site, and she and her husband had twice prayed over the telephone with Eells in the waning hours of Kara's life.

Other books included "Handbook for Healing," "God's Chosen Fast," "90 Minutes in Heaven," "Dear God Prayer Book" and a medical and first-aid book.

Members of the Neumann family appear to have been followers of David Eells. At the very least, it appears that they were influenced by him. The Neumanns claim not to be religious fanatics but the evidence removed from their home would suggest otherwise.

At this point, there are no charges against the Neumanns but Police Chief Vergin does expect charges to filed.

Some of the latest revelations about Kara's condition in her final days and hours come from her grandmother.

...Evalani Gordon, the girl's grandmother, told an investigator that her granddaughter had been ill for one to 1 ½ weeks and reported that "Madeline was very tired and wanted to be held by mom."

She said three to four days before her granddaughter's death, "the girl only wanted to lie down and do homework from her bed." By Saturday, when the girl was unable to walk or talk, the grandmother, who lives out of state, told Leilani Neumann to take Madeline to a doctor, the document says.

"Leilani Neumann told Evalani Gordon that Madeline would be fine and God would heal her," according to the document.

On Sunday, Gordon spoke with Leilani Neumann and discovered the girl was in a coma. Gordon then contacted a daughter-in-law, Ariel Ness, who lives in California. Ness then called the Marathon County Dispatch Center.

Ness later contacted the dispatch center to inform authorities that "water may have been poured down the girl's throat," the document says.

Marathon County Medical Examiner John Larson said that the girl "was found to be in an emaciated state," according to the document.

In an interview with the Journal Sentinel, Larson said, "I think it's probably safe to say she was gaunt, drawn, extremely slender. She certainly had an appearance of malnutrition and dehydration."

According to the Web site of the American Diabetes Association, the body burns fat to get energy in ketoacidosis.

If an 11-year-old child is unable to walk or talk, it's time to get medical care immediately.

That's not a difficult call to make.

Vergin also provided other details of the case in an interview. He said the Neumanns' three other children were at the home as well as Althea and Randall Wormgoor, friends of the couple. The Wormgoors spoke on the phone during a 911 call from the home Sunday.

Vergin said when authorities arrived at the home, "the copper just scooped the child up and ran out to the ambulance."

Friday, a friend of the family answered the door at the Neumanns' home and said the family was not interested in talking.

I can understand why the family wouldn't be interested in talking.

If I were grieving the death of a child, there's no way I would agree to talk to the media, whatever the circumstances.

According to the Wisconsin State Journal:

Three siblings of a Weston girl who died from untreated diabetes as her parents prayed for healing instead of taking her to a doctor have been removed from the home to stay with other relatives, police said Friday.

An agreement was reached between the parents and social services experts that the move would be in the best interests of everyone, Everest Metro Police Chief Dan Vergin said.

The children are not in danger, he said.

"They were checked out by physicians. ... Physically, they are fine," he said. "There is no physical evidence of abuse or neglect. None."

...The children removed from the home range in age from 13 to 16 and are expected to return to their parents once an investigation of the girl's death wraps up, Vergin said.

He would not specify where they are living, other than with another family member.

...Vergin said his agency's final report will make no recommendations on possible charges against the parents, leaving that up to the district attorney to decide.

"There is no intent. They didn't want their child to die. They thought what they were doing was the right thing," he said. "They believed up to the time she stopped breathing she was going to get better. They just thought it was a spiritual attack. They believed if they prayed enough she would get through it."

...If the district attorney believes the parents did not have a "good-faith belief" that the girl was about to die and they had a strong belief in relying on prayer for treatment, it would be difficult to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that a crime occurred, [Janine Geske, a Marquette University law professor,] said.

New details emerged Friday on how quickly the girl's health deteriorated.

"We are getting people who saw this girl a week before she passed away and she appeared fine," Vergin said.

The girl became bedridden last Saturday, he said.

I don't know how the Neumanns were able to stand by and pray as they watched their daughter become bedridden, unable to walk or talk.

Even if her dramatic deterioration took place within a day or two of her death, that was plenty of time for the Neumanns to get their daughter medical care. They had to know that her life was in danger.

I believe that the parents never intended for her to die. I just can't believe that they really thought they were doing the right thing by failing to get their daughter to a doctor when she was obviously so ill.

The grandmother was saying that the child needed to see a doctor. I don't know why she chose to get her daughter-in-law in California involved rather than just calling 911 herself.

...The grandmother eventually contacted a daughter-in-law in California who called police last Sunday on a non-emergency line, reporting the girl was in a coma and needed medical help. An ambulance was dispatched to the home shortly before some friends in the home called 911 to report the girl had stopped breathing, authorities said.

It's so sad to think that an ambulance was en route to the home when Kara stopped breathing and the adults in the home finally decided it was time to call 911.

I think it would be wrong not to charge the Neumanns. Just because they didn't want her to die, and I truly believe they didn't, doesn't mean they shouldn't be held accountable for neglecting her.

Although Kara's death wasn't intentional, it can't be considered an accident. Her parents failed her. I don't think religion can be used as an excuse for a degree of that neglect that has such devastating consequences.

Drug House Busted: Good News, Bad News

From the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:
Officers in the Milwaukee Police Gang Crimes Unit took marijuana, cocaine, cocaine base, a handgun, $17,000 and a bulletproof vest from south side home described as a drug house run by Latin King gang members, police reported.

The officers searched the house, 3255 S. 84th St., about 8 p.m. on Thursday.

The good news is Milwaukee Police broke up another Latin King operation.

The bad news is the Latin Kings' tentacles reach far beyond Milwaukee's near south side.

The drug house is steps away from West Allis.

Gang activity is infiltrating what once were relatively crime-free areas. Definitely bad news for Milwaukee and the surrounding communities.

Charges Against Lance Cpl. Stephen Tatum Dropped

I don't think there's any question about it. The reporting of the alleged massacre at Haditha was an absolute disgrace, the hyping of the incident unconscionable.

Much to the dismay of the anti-Bush, anti-Iraq war, and in some cases, anti-American crowd, Haditha didn't quite turn out to be My Lai after all.

The Leftists, elected Democrats and their mouthpieces in the liberal agenda-driven media, were so eager to believe that U.S. Marines murdered Iraqi civilians in cold blood that they didn't bother to wait for an investigation into the allegations.

They scooped up all the leaks about the incident and splashed them without hesitation.

There were emphatic declarations of the Marines' guilt, with remarks from John Murtha being some of the most disgusting.

Will TIME run a cover story to complement "The Ghosts of Haditha" issue?

I think something like "The Left's Besmirching of U.S. Marines" would be in order. It would be appropriate to counter "The Shame of Kilo Company" with "The Shame of the Foaming at the Mouth Liberal Media."

CAMP PENDLETON, Calif. --
The Marine Corps dropped charges and gave full immunity Friday to a serviceman who was accused of involuntary manslaughter in a squad's killing of 24 Iraqis in Haditha in 2005.

The case against Lance Cpl. Stephen Tatum, 26, of Edmond, Okla., was dismissed as jury selection was about to begin for his court-martial. The government has been seeking Tatum's testimony against the squad leader, Staff Sgt. Frank Wuterich of Meriden, Conn.

Prosecutors say Wuterich directed the assault immediately after a roadside bomb killed one Marine and wounded two others in a convoy. Wuterich and another Marine shot five men nearby before the squad leader ordered his men to clear homes with grenades and gunfire, killing unarmed civilians.

In February, Tatum received an order to testify against Wuterich and an unrequested immunity order that said anything to which he testified would not be used against him in his court-martial. On Friday, a new immunity order was issued, along with the dismissal of charges.

"Lance Cpl. Tatum will testify truthfully if called as a witness," said his attorney, Jack Zimmerman.

Tatum was relieved by the news and considered it an affirmation of his contention that he and his squadmates responded to a perceived threat as they had been trained to do, Zimmerman said.

"It has been a very happy morning," he said.

Tatum was the third enlisted Marine to have all charges dismissed.

Four enlisted Marines were initially charged with murder and four officers were charged with failing to investigate the deaths. Over time the case has shrunk, including removal of all murder charges.

The highest-ranking defendant is Lt. Col. Jeffrey R. Chessani of Rangely, Colo., commander of the Camp Pendleton-based 3rd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment at the time of the Nov. 19, 2005, Haditha killings. He is the highest-ranking officer to face a combat-related court-martial since the Vietnam War and is scheduled to face court-martial in April.

Chessani, accused of dereliction of duty and violation of a lawful order, has said he didn't order a formal investigation because he believed the deaths resulted from lawful combat.

His attorney said Tatum's dismissal gave additional credence to Chessani's claims.

"This is a house of cards, and it's all falling apart now," said Brian Rooney.

In addition to two counts of involuntary manslaughter, Tatum had been charged with reckless endangerment and aggravated assault.

Zimmerman said there was no agreement with the government before the dismissal.

"Absolutely, there is no deal," he said.

...Wuterich is the only enlisted man still facing prosecution. He faces nine counts of voluntary manslaughter, aggravated assault, reckless endangerment and obstruction of justice. There is no date set for his court-martial.

Wuterich's civilian defense attorney, Neal Puckett, contended that the Tatum dismissal showed the government has a poor case against his client.

"I think it's a further demonstration of how weak the government's case has become. Of the four Marines who fired weapons that day, only one still faces charges," Puckett said.

So yet another soldier has had the charges against him dropped.

Without question, any Marines involved in wrongdoing should be held accountable and punished. The intentional slaughter of civilians is criminal. I'm certainly not suggesting that the investigation was inappropriate.

But what was so troubling about the Haditha incident was the way the Left and the despicable John Murtha trashed the Marines with their sprint to judgment.

They absolutely drooled over the story of Marines killing innocents in cold blood, yet they don't give much attention to charges being dropped. They don't retract their previous slander. I guess that doesn't fit their agenda.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Taylor and Walker: Degrees of Separation

During Wednesday night's debate between Scott Walker and Lena Taylor, Patrick McIlheran points out that Taylor repeatedly brought up that she earned college degrees while Walker did not complete his degree.

He notes Greg Borowski's report for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel:

At the forums, one subtle but persistent theme from Taylor has been to suggest her own educational background makes her more qualified for the job than Walker.

Taylor has a law degree from Southern Illinois University. Walker left Marquette University about a semester before graduation for a full-time job.

On Wednesday, at least three times Taylor noted she has a college degree. At the Marquette debate, she mentioned her degrees before stressing she finishes what she starts.

Walker has said he intends to complete his degree, though an effort to take classes part time at Marquette a few years back was derailed when his mother-in-law became ill.

After Wednesday's forum, Taylor said it was important to "lead by example" on education. Comparing the county to a large business, she said that a corporation would pick the "most credentialed, most experienced candidate."

Walker said that view ignores the fact he has been doing the job for six years.

"I've kept all the promises I've made," Walker said. "I think they should judge me based on my record."

McIlheran asks: "Does Taylor really want to make snobby points about a guy being intellectually inferior because he's close to a bachelor's degree but doesn't quite have it, while she has a law degree?"

I don't think Taylor is going to score any points by citing her degrees and dissing Walker for being unable to finish up his degree. It seems especially nasty since the illness of Walker's mother-in-law kept him from completing his final credits.

Taylor tries to make the case that her education makes her a better qualified, more experienced candidate. That might work if Walker didn't have six years actually serving as county executive to his credit.

I certainly don't consider college or professional degrees to be the only significant measure of a person's abilities and intelligence.

I know people with degrees who struggle to write in complete sentences, let alone manage to express coherent thoughts. I also know people without degrees who were some of the wisest individuals I've ever known -- like my grandparents.

While candidates' levels of education are important to consider, they don't necessarily indicate one's superiority over another.

Taylor hurt herself by repeatedly jabbing Walker for not completing his college degree. Being a snooty elitist won't play well with the hardworking, taxpaying voters also lacking college diplomas. Among those voters, only the self-loathing would be won over by Taylor's boasting.

Walker has a college education and years of experience as county executive. Taylor doesn't.

More than their levels of education, the two candidates are separated by their positions on the issues.

Taylor will raise taxes. Guaranteed.

Do Milwaukee County residents want to elect a candidate with a law degree or one working to hold the line on taxes?

I don't think you need a college education to answer that.

Obama, Wright, the Mansion, and the Gated Community

It's not very courageous for Barack Obama to claim he would have left the Trinity United Church of Christ of Rev. Jeremiah Wright if the pastor had not retired.

It's complete hypothetical BS, worthless drivel. Obama admits to having heard Wright say controversial things. He had 20 years to leave the church.

The fact is Obama knew what Wright and his church were about and he didn't leave. Unless Obama is one of the most clueless people to ever walk the earth, he was well aware of the depth of Wright's racism, anti-Semitism, anti-Americanism.

WASHINGTON -- White House hopeful Barack Obama suggests he would have left his Chicago church had his longtime pastor, whose fiery anti-American comments about U.S. foreign policy and race relations threatened Obama's campaign, not stepped down.

"Had the reverend not retired, and had he not acknowledged that what he had said had deeply offended people and were inappropriate and mischaracterized what I believe is the greatness of this country, for all its flaws, then I wouldn't have felt comfortable staying at the church," Obama said Thursday during a taping of the ABC talk show, "The View." The interview will be broadcast Friday.

What a load!

I don't buy that the brilliant Obama didn't know what Wright was preaching. I absolutely don't buy it. The fact that he didn't leave reveals that he willingly tolerated Wright's hate for America as well as his disgraceful racial, ethnic, and religious slurs.

Obama insists that if not for Wright's retirement, he wouldn't have felt comfortable staying at the church.

Sure.

Obama was comfortable donating tens of thousands of dollars to the church. Obama was comfortable quoting Wright and declaring him to be his spiritual mentor. Obama was comfortable giving his speech about race last week and refusing to disown Wright.


Obama is comfortable running around and downplaying the outrageous things that Wright has said. Obama defends Wright, "This is somebody that was preaching three sermons at least a week for 30 years and it got boiled down...into a half-minute sound clip and just played it over and over and over again, partly because it spoke to some of the racial divisions in this country."

Obama is saying that Wright has been victimized by the media. Now we're supposed to accept Obama's statement on The View that he would have quit his church if Wright hadn't retired?

I can't accept that. The way Obama has handled the Wright controversy, Obama's own actions and his words, tell me that his assertion about leaving the church is a lie.


Obama says that what Wright said isn't a big deal and it's being distorted, but if not for Wright's retirement, he would leave the church. Huh?
In his sermons over the years, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright has railed against the United States and accused it of bringing on the Sept. 11 attacks by spreading terrorism. He also has said the government invented AIDS to destroy "people of color" and has shouted "God damn America" for its treatment of minorities.

"Sermons over the YEARS"-- This stuff was Wright's calling card, not an aberration, not the stuff of a half-minute sound clip.
...In an attempt to quiet the controversy, Obama gave a speech last week in which he sharply condemned Wright's remarks but did not repudiate him.

Obama said Wednesday he has spoken with Wright, who retired from Trinity United Church of Christ last month but remains as a senior pastor.

In spite of continued attempts, Obama has failed to quiet the controversy.

That's because Wright's sermons are so hateful and so inflammatory and Obama embraced the man so completely. Obama can't rewrite his history.

What was said was said. What was done was done.

...Asked about the controversy Wright's comments have created, Republican John McCain said while campaigning in Denver: "I can only say that I am sure, knowing Senator Obama, that he does not share the extreme views that were expressed that I saw on television."

I don't like this statement from McCain. How mealy-mouthed!

If Obama didn't share Wright's extreme views to some extent, why did he stay at the church? Why would he listen to that trash year in and year out? You know he heard it.

I guess it was all political maneuvering on Obama's part. He sat in the pew to advance his political career while Wright spewed. Very slimy.

McCain is bugging me, too. He's bending over backwards to keep from offending independents and disgruntled Dems. He puts politics ahead of principles.

One more thing about the retired Rev. Wright--

He won't be squeaking by on Social Security checks in retirement. Wright will be living in luxury.

From
FOX News:


The four- bedroom, 10,000-plus square foot home that Trinity United Church of Christ is building for Reverend Jeremiah Wright. (FNC Photo)

This was supposed to be the week that the Rev. Jeremiah Wright Jr. returned to the pulpit to preach for the first time since his anti-American sermons generated nationwide outrage and drew condemnation from his longtime parishioner, Barack Obama.

But, citing security concerns, Wright canceled his speaking engagements in Florida and Texas. A spokeswoman at his former church in Chicago said his schedule is pending.

A two-week FOX News investigation, however, has uncovered where Wright will be spending a good deal of his time in retirement, and it is a far cry from the impoverished Chicago streets where the preacher led his ministry for 36 years.

FOX News has uncovered documents that indicate Wright is about to move to a 10,340-square-foot, four-bedroom home in suburban Chicago, currently under construction in a gated community.

...“Some people think deals like this are hypocritical. Jeremiah Wright himself criticizes people from the pulpit for middle classism, for too much materialism,” said Andrew Walsh, Associate Director of the Leonard E. Greenberg Center for the Study of Religion in Public Life with Trinity College in Hartford, Conn.

“So he’s entitled to be tweaked here. So the question really is, how unusual is this? Somewhat unusual,” he said.

According to documents obtained from the Cook County Register of Deeds, Wright purchased two empty lots in Tinley Park, Ill., from Chicago restaurant chain owner Kenny Lewis for $345,000 in 2004.

Documents show Wright sold the property to his church, Trinity United, in December 2006, with the proceeds going to a living trust shared with his wife, Ramah.

The sale price for the land was just under $308,000, about $40,000 less than Wright’s original purchase two years earlier.

Public records of the sale show Trinity initially obtained a $10 million bank loan to purchase the property and build a new house on the land.

But further investigation with tax and real estate attorneys showed that the church had actually secured a $1.6 million mortgage for the home purchase, and attached a $10 million line of credit, for reasons unspecified in the paperwork.

...Wright did not respond to repeated calls for comment, and Trinity United refused to discuss the specifics of the home it is building for him and the way the deal was financed.

Wright will be living in a mansion in a gated community. He's putting distance between himself and the riff raff, the undesirables. It's seems rather hypocritical that he rails on Hillary for not knowing what it's like to be a poor black man when he doesn't know. Wright didn't grow up or live in poverty. Wright has a middle class background.

Rather than spending $1.6 million on a home for himself, Wright could establish a scholarship fund or apply the funds to some other worthy cause. You'd think he could cut at least a few thousand feet off his new house.

Does he have any pangs of guilt about spending so much on himself?

I hear Wright screaming from the pulpit, "God damn America."

He's managed to make a pretty good life for himself in America, hasn't he?

Unleavened Bread Ministries and America's Last Days

UDPATE, April 28, 2008: Parents in diabetes case charged
The parents of an 11-year-old girl who died of complications from untreated diabetes last month have both been charged with second-degree reckless homicide, according to Marathon County District Attorney Jill Falstad.

...In a statement released at a 1 p.m. news conference, Falstad said the parents' actions meet the standard of the charges.

"Second-degree reckless homicide has two elements," Falstad said. "The first element is that the defendant caused the death of another. The second element is that the defendant caused the death by criminally reckless conduct.

"In this case, that conduct was the failure to seek medical intervention. The failure to seek medical intervention created unreasonable and substantial risk of death or great bodily harm to Kara and the Neumanns were aware of the risk."


_______________


The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports:
The night before 11-year-old Madeline Kara Neumann died of complications from diabetes, her Town of Weston family prayed over the telephone with the founder of the AmericasLastDays.com Web site, the founder said today.

David Eells, whose Unleavened Bread Ministries operates the site, said that on Saturday that he was asked by an "elder" to call Kara's parents, Dale and Leilani Neumann, to pray for their daughter. Leilani Neumann had written several posts on the Web site, which focuses on healing and the apocalypse.

...Eells said he also received a call from the Neumanns on Sunday as the family "followed an emergency vehicle with Kara in it. They told me that she had stopped breathing and asked if I would pray that the Lord would spare her and raise her up, which I did."

Kara's mother Leilani Neumann claims that the family doesn't belong to an organized religion. She says that they aren't fanatics and have nothing against doctors.

Really? I guess that comes down to how one defines "fanatic."

The family's connection with David Eells and Leilani Neumann's participation on the website makes me doubt her claims.

In my view, the Unleavened Bread Ministries website caters to End Times fanatics.

Read the press release from David Eells.

We at UBM would like to clear up some misconceptions from what we know, which is little. :o)

That's unusual. I don't typically see emoticons used in press releases.
Dale and Leilani Neumann from Wisconsin contacted one of our elders to ask that I (David Eells) call them to pray for their daughter. That elder got in touch with me Saturday evening and I called the Neumanns. To my knowledge this was the first time I had spoken to them other than by a few emails over the last few years and posting a testimony on our site from their ministry. It has been reported that they are "under" our ministry but they have had their own coffee house ministry for a few years in which they share the Gospel and we are glad of their work in The Lord.

They seem to be a very loving family who want to walk in the steps of Jesus, as do we. When I called they shared concern for their daughter, Kara, who had started getting sick in just the last day or so (not as is reported for the last 30 days). They asked me to pray and agree with them in prayer, basically because she appeared pale and listless (not a quote). They did not seem overly concerned because they had had healings before. This is not an unusual kind of request to us. I and our elders and prayer ministers are used to praying for the sick and have seen many healed by our Lord. We do not dictate to people about whether to go to the doctor or not but agree with their faith as the Bible says: {Matthew 18:19} Again I say unto you, that if two of you shall agree on earth as touching anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father who is in heaven. We are not commanded in scripture to send people to the doctor but to meet their needs through prayer and faith. As anyone here in the ministry will tell you, we are not against doctors for those who have their faith there and never condemn or restrict them in any way. But we know that the best one to trust in for healing is Jesus Christ. The foundation for receiving this benefit from Him is repentance and faith in His promises. {1Peter 2:24} who his own self bare our sins in his body upon the tree, that we, having died unto sins, might live unto righteousness; by whose stripes ye were healed.

Jesus, whose faith was perfect, gave healing to anyone who had faith and still does. {Mt.8:13} And Jesus said unto the centurion, Go thy way; as thou hast believed, [so] be it done unto thee. And the servant was healed in that hour. ... {9:22} But Jesus turning and seeing her said, Daughter, be of good cheer; thy faith hath made thee whole. ... {29} Then touched he their eyes, saying, According to your faith be it done unto you. {30} And their eyes were opened. I am very sorry that I have not yet manifested the faith of Jesus or his discernment when someone else has the repentance and faith needed. However, even in my weakness God's grace has healed many.

The day after I first spoke with the Neumanns they called me again from their car, very concerned as they followed an emergency vehicle with Kara in it. They told me that she had stopped breathing and asked if I would pray that The Lord would spare her and raise her up, which I did. I called on our prayer ministers and elders to pray for her too. The next thing I heard from them was that they were being investigated, which is sad since they don’t investigate the people who put their trust in doctors whose family members die by the hundreds of thousands from medical mistakes every year, according the AMA's own admission. We know that the doctors do the best they can with what they have and we do not condemn them. We would like the same consideration.

That is lame on a number of counts.

Of course, the Neumanns should be investigated. Their daughter possibly died as a result of their neglect. Our society demands that such an occurrence be investigated.

Eells notes that people die because of mistakes made by doctors. True, people do die from doctors' mistakes. Then, the doctors' actions are investigated. They often get sued for their negligence. We most certainly do condemn doctors for errors. They are held accountable. Doctors aren't given a pass without a trial.

When Christians begin to put their trust in The Lord they are as babes learning to walk in a new Kingdom. Sometimes we stumble because of lack of faith or repentance in an area but hopefully we correct this and get back up. 'The righteous shall live by faith.' Those who do not know Jesus through being born of His Word think it is a terrible thing to die and it is for them. Jesus called dying 'entering into life' for those who know Him. Real life is in the Kingdom of Heaven and in the presence of our Lord and He can't wait for that. {Psalms 116:15} Precious in the sight of Jehovah is the death of his saints. A few of God's people have temporarily stepped into that realm and did not want to come back but had more work to do. We are sure Kara does not want to come back but we have asked God to send her for her parents' sake and as a testimony of His love for us.

I'm not sure I understand this: "A few of God's people have temporarily stepped into that realm and did not want to come back but had more work to do. We are sure Kara does not want to come back but we have asked God to send her for her parents' sake and as a testimony of His love for us."

What does that mean? Is Eells saying that they are praying that God bring Kara back to life on earth?

At best we are poor representatives of our Lord but we love him and seek to walk in His steps for ourselves and mankind’s sake. We expect to grow in wisdom and stature in Him and do a better job in the future. Please pray for the Neumanns who do not deserve this persecution. Please pray for us that we would better represent our Father. Please pray for America to repent and turn to the Jesus of the Bible.

Thanks for you patience and understanding.


Love from your servant in Christ,

David Eells

P.S.: We may update this as time goes by.

Again, this is a weird press release.

Most press releases don't conclude with a P.S.

I agree that the Neumanns need prayers. Their daughter is dead because they didn't get her the medical care she needed to save her life. I imagine that their suffering must be unbearable.

Eells says the Neumanns don't deserve this persecution.

Kara didn't deserve to die from a treatable illness.

Regarding his press release, I think Eells is bordering on exploiting the death of Kara Neumann to promote his ministry.

What's with calling for "America to repent and turn to the Jesus of the Bible"?


This press release is much more than getting out the facts about Eells' involvement with the Neumann family. It reveals a fanaticism.