Sunday, August 4, 2013

From politics to the pulpit, faith groups see 'the hand of God' in ...

Maricela Aguilar delivered a cantaloupe to Rep. Steve King after his controversial comments on immigration.

By Carrie Dann, Political Reporter, NBC News

When lawmakers return to their home districts this August, they?re likely to hear strident opinions about immigration reform from local business owners, farmers, political activists, talk radio devotees and regular citizens engaged in the democratic process.

But many Christian leaders are hoping that they also hear the voice of the Almighty as well.

?It is very difficult to argue theologically that Jesus would be opposed to immigration reform,? says Rev. Samuel Rodriguez, the leader of the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference. ?Beyond the issue of the public policy, the heart of God is for those that are suffering and for the oppressed and the marginalized.?

Rodriguez?s group ? encompassing more than 40,000 evangelical congregations nationwide ? is just one of many faith-based organizations hoping to influence the immigration debate this fall by invoking scripture and the compassion of God, from the pulpit and at political events.??

Pro-reform Christian organizations trace their support for the overhaul from Biblical passages and parables; the most often-quoted is Matthew 25:35, which reads ??For I was hungry, and ye gave me meat; I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink; I was a stranger, and ye took me in.? Leviticus 19 is another common refrain: ?The stranger that dwelleth with you shall be unto you as one born among you, and thou shalt love him as thyself; for ye were strangers in the land of Egypt.?

Manuel Balce Ceneta / AP

Rep. Raul Grijalva, D-Nev., center, joins immigration reform supporters as they block a street on Capitol Hill in Washington, Thursday, Aug. 1, 2013, during a rally protesting immigration policies and the House GOP's inability to pass a bill that contains a pathway to citizenship.

But there are also very practical reasons for these organizations to engage in the pro-reform effort. Immigrants are increasingly a part of the fabric of American faith communities, advocates say ? even those in congressional districts that are still overwhelmingly white. And when undocumented individuals face poverty, health problems and deportations, they?re turning to churches for help.

?Most evangelicals who are concerned about immigration aren?t concerned about immigration as an abstract issue,? says Dr. Russell Moore, the new head of the Southern Baptist Convention?s Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission. ?They?re concerned about people in their pews who are facing a broken system. They?re concerned about families that are threatened with being split apart.?

The faith-based push is far from new, but it?s reaching peak volume as the effort to pass immigration reform that includes a pathway?to citizenship for undocumented immigrants is bogged down in the GOP-led House going into the August recess.

Some, like the National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference, are specifically targeting Republican members of Congress who are on the fence by appealing to members of their congregation to attend town hall meetings and visit district offices. Others are more focused on building support for the reform effort through prayer and community events.

The United States Conference of Catholic Bishops is urging local dioceses to organize pilgrimages, devote masses and deliver sermons on the subject; it has also suggested Sept. 8 as a day of action for Catholics to pray for ? and speak up about ? immigration.??

The ?Bibles, Badges and Business? campaign, made up of diverse faith groups as well as law enforcement and business groups, is planning about 50 events nationwide, including roundtables, speeches and town hall visits. The Evangelical Immigration Table, a coalition made of up many of the same evangelical organizations, aims to target about 80 congressional districts with in-person visits, phone calls and op-eds, according to Jim Wallis, founder of Sojourners, a national Christian organization focused on social and racial justice.

?When a pastor with 5,000 members calls his member of Congress, he answers the phone,? Wallis said.

The alliances between different religious groups ? not always on the same page on other issues like sexual morality, war and the economy ? also allow the pro-reform coalition to offer a consistent message to people of faith from born-again Christians and Mormons, who have supported Republicans overwhelmingly in past presidential elections, to Catholics and mainline Protestants, who are more evenly split between the two parties.

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, joins MSNBC's Alex Witt to talk about immigration reform and the Voting Rights Act.

?The faith groups can reach to both sides of the spectrum,? said Kevin Appleby, the director of migration policy and public affairs at the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops. ?We have an ability to reach into offices where others may not be able to and make the argument that this is the right thing to do.?

Appleby acknowledges that the politics of immigration reform aren?t easy for some lawmakers, who may be hearing overwhelmingly from constituents who oppose the reform effort when they go home to heavily conservative districts.

Not all who hear the message are going to be convinced that creating a path to citizenship is the Christian thing to do. (Critics of the citizenship policy, after all, also cite the Bible, pointing to Romans 13: ?Let every person be subject to the governing authorities.?)

?But,? Appleby adds, ?it certainly doesn?t hurt for members to know that their church or their faith organization would support them on this, and thank them for it.???

Moore, from the Southern Baptist Convention, says that ? although his organization doesn?t specifically organize political activity ? the most effective way to influence lawmakers on the fence about the reform effort is simply to tell the stories of how the broken immigration system affects people in their own churches.

?As our congregations become more ethnically diverse ? and they are, rapidly ? our people are seeing the human element here,? he said. ?Those stories are finding their way out of local congregations and toward elected officials.?

A May 2013 study by the Pew Research Center?s Religion and Public Life Project estimated that, over the last two decades, the United States has admitted about 12.7 million legal immigrants who identify as Christians. ?About 60 percent of new legal immigrants last year were Christian.

And among undocumented immigrants, the percentage of Christians is even more striking. More than eight in ten undocumented immigrants are Christian, the study found, translating to an estimated 9.2 million individuals living in the United States today.

?The future of the churches, all of them ? Catholic, Southern Baptist, evangelical, mainline ? the future of our churches are immigrants,? Wallis says. ?They are our future.?

Rodriguez agrees, citing projections that show the majority of evangelicals in the United States may be Latino by the year 2030.

?The optics that guide the community in addressing immigration reform are not just morally driven ? which is the most important ? but are also about self-preservation,? Rodriguez says. ?

?The very future of American evangelicalism lies in the hands of the immigration reform debate. So it?s a matter of survival.?

This story was originally published on

Source: http://nbcpolitics.nbcnews.com/_news/2013/08/03/19819640-from-politics-to-the-pulpit-faith-groups-see-the-hand-of-god-in-immigration-reform?lite

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Nexus 7 2 vs iPad Mini in Australia: The Old Apple vs the New Android, Battle of Small Tablets [PHOTOS]

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Source: www.ibtimes.com --- Saturday, August 03, 2013
Google Nexus 7 2 aka N7 2nd generation is now available in Australia for $439.95 (32 GB) or $389. How does it compete with the existing Apple IPad mini? There is a $40 difference between the relatively older Apple tablet and the newer (yet cheaper) Google Android tablet. ...

Source: http://www.ibtimes.comhttp:0//www.ibtimes.co.in/articles/496553/20130804/nexus-7-2-ipad-mini-price-specs.htm

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Monday, July 22, 2013

Greening of the Earth pushed way back in time

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Conventional scientific wisdom has it that plants and other creatures have only lived on land for about 500 million years, but a new study is pointing to evidence for life on land that is four times as old -- at 2.2 billion years ago and almost half way back to the inception of the planet.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/~3/c2OWlGvZPMM/130722141548.htm

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Sunday, July 21, 2013

Helen Thomas with President Nixon, 1972

Red Grandy ?Stars and Stripes
Salzburg, Austria, May, 1972: President Richard Nixon signals an end to an impromptu press conference with United Press International's Helen Thomas and other reporters on the grounds of Klessheim Palace, where he was resting on his way to arms limitation talks in Moscow. Thomas, the only female print journalist to accompany Nixon on his trip to China earlier that year, died July 20, 2013 at age 92.

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Source: http://feeds.stripes.com/~r/stripes/all/~3/MEW11KDwBWo/helen-thomas-with-president-nixon-1972-1.231481

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Saturday, July 20, 2013

Microsoft shares hit hard after profit badly misses expectations

Microsoft Corp. fell the most in more than four years after fourth-quarter profit missed analysts' projections by the biggest margin in at least a decade as demand weakens for Windows-run personal computers.

Results also were hurt by a $900 million writedown of Surface tablet inventory, shaving 7 cents a share from earnings. Excluding that, profit was 66 cents a share, Microsoft said Thursday, trailing analysts' 75-cent prediction.

Stung by a Surface device that few consumers want, the company faces a shift by consumers to mobile gadgets that offer many of the same features as laptops and desktops at lower prices.

CEO Steve Ballmer's effort to focus the company on devices and services may reduce profit as both areas carry thinner margins than traditional software.

"PCs were just uglier than people thought they would be, and people also had more Surface sales in there than there were," said Mark Moerdler, an analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein & Co. in New York, who rates Microsoft shares outperform.

Microsoft fell 11 percent to $31.40 at Friday's close in New York, the most since January 2009. The stock has gained 18 percent this year, compared with a 19 percent increase in the Standard & Poor's 500 Index.

PC shipments fell 11 percent last quarter, Framingham, Mass.-based IDC said. Surface, Microsoft's first-ever computer, shipped just 900,000 units in the last two quarters, IDC said.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/dp-business/~3/iPOCHDemG1Y/microsoft-shares-hit-hard-after-profit-badly-misses

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Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, others urge for greater U.S. gov't transparency

Close to two-dozen technology firms, including AOL, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Yahoo,?have signed a letter to the U.S. government urging greater transparency?in the wake of the National Security Agency's PRISM?spying scandal.

Read this

PRISM: Here's how the NSA wiretapped the Internet

The National Security Agency's "PRISM" program is able to collect, in realtime, intelligence not limited to social networks and email accounts. But the seven tech companies accused of opening 'back doors' to the spy agency could well be proven innocent.

Since former NSA contractor turned whistleblower Edward Snowden leaked a number of documents that detailed how the U.S. government and its foreign allies were spying on their citizens, many technology companies have tried to distance themselves from claims of collusion and cooperation.

The letter [PDF], which can also be read below, calls on the Obama administration to allow companies to disclose exactly how many government requests for customer and subscriber data that Internet providers, telcos and Web-based companies are handed.

Google first began this trend in early 2010, and others followed suit. Microsoft became?the latest firm to join the trend earlier this year?after pressure from privacy groups.

But companies are not allowed to disclose the full amount of?National Security Letter "gagging orders" handed down by federal authorities. Instead, they are only permitted to report the number range.

The letter also calls for the government to allow these technology firms, and others, to detail how many requests made under Section 215 of the Patriot Act?? which demands all "tangible things" including business records and private user data?? as well as under Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), and other related statutes that currently prevent these companies from publishing these figures themselves.

The group also calls for Congress to pass laws that force the U.S. government to report these figures accurately without having to first seek permission from the FISA court.

Also, the companies have launched a group petition on the White House's "We The People" platform.

The coalition includes other technology firms but also civil liberties and privacy groups?? such as the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), among others.

"Democracy demands accountability, and accountability requires transparency," Yahoo general counsel Ron Bell said in a blog post on Thursday.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zdnet/BTL/~3/1G0hBzEzVO0/

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Is sexual addiction the real deal?

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Controversy exists over whether what some mental health experts call hypersexuality, or sexual addiction, is a mental disorder at all. Now researchers have measured how the brain responded in people who admitted having problems regulating their viewing of sex pictures, and found their brain responses were not predicted by any of the indicators that were proposed for a diagnosis of hypersexuality.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/most_popular/~3/cLibaeWYmbI/130719104933.htm

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