Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Fr. Z visits Wyoming Catholic College

In the past, I have noted my interest in Wyoming Catholic College, the intriguing new Catholic liberal arts college that has been established in the wilderness of Wyoming.

In a previous post, I wrote of the unique character of the school:
....A small liberal arts college in located on a couple thousand acres of land in the foothills of the Rocky mountains. A Great Books curriculum. Orthodox Catholic. Friendly to the traditional Latin Mass. Outdoors integrated into student life, including a 21-day camping/wilderness training expedition for freshman orientation...
Father Z, author of the blog What Does the Prayer Really Say?, recently traveled to Wyoming to give a talk at the school.

He has posted his impressions of the school (along with some wonderful photos - a trademark of his blog). As always, he provides an informative and insightful report.

You can find his post on his visit to WCC, here.

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Wyoming Catholic College is endorsed by
The Cardinal Newman Society (CNS) in its Guide to Choosing a Catholic College. The CNS review of WCC can be found here.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Video: March for Life, 2010

This is a neat video montage from last month's March for Life in Washington D.C.



The video was produced by students from Franciscan University.

H/T The Catholic Key

Friday, February 19, 2010

Overpopulation is a Myth - Video 2

The Population Research Institute has released a second video examining popular misconceptions about global population.

While most people believe overpopulation is a global threat, the reality is just the opposite. Below-replacement birth-rates in many parts of the world are the real threat to global prosperity and stability.



One thought comes to mind: Here in the US, the biggest threat to our future prosperity is the looming Medicare & Social Security crisis due to the impending retirement of the massive baby boom generation. There simply will not be enough younger workers paying payroll taxes to keep the system solvent.

One cannot help but think we might be in a much better position to handle the situation if the 50 million babies aborted in the US over the last 30+ years had been allowed to be born, grow up, get jobs, and pay taxes.

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Here is the first video in the series for those who have not yet seen it:



These videos were produced by the Population Research Institute. The companion website for the videos is found here.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Fr. Robert Barron discusses Lent

Some food for thought at the beginning of Lent:

Case for man-made climate change continues to unravel

In recent weeks, the case for man-made global warming seems to be unraveling before our eyes as one claim after another is debunked.

Below are excerpts from two more devastating news reports coming out of England.

Excerpt 1 is from a London Times article titled, "World may not be warming, say scientists:"

...In its last assessment the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) said the evidence that the world was warming was “unequivocal”.

It warned that greenhouse gases had already heated the world by 0.7C and that there could be 5C-6C more warming by 2100, with devastating impacts on humanity and wildlife. However, new research, including work by British scientists, is casting doubt on such claims. Some even suggest the world may not be warming much at all.

“The temperature records cannot be relied on as indicators of global change,” said John Christy, professor of atmospheric science at the University of Alabama in Huntsville, a former lead author on the IPCC.

The doubts of Christy and a number of other researchers focus on the thousands of weather stations around the world, which have been used to collect temperature data over the past 150 years.

These stations, they believe, have been seriously compromised by factors such as urbanisation, changes in land use and, in many cases, being moved from site to site.

Christy has published research papers looking at these effects in three different regions: east Africa, and the American states of California and Alabama.

“The story is the same for each one,” he said. “The popular data sets show a lot of warming but the apparent temperature rise was actually caused by local factors affecting the weather stations, such as land development.”

The IPCC faces similar criticisms from Ross McKitrick, professor of economics at the University of Guelph, Canada, who was invited by the panel to review its last report.

The experience turned him into a strong critic and he has since published a research paper questioning its methods.

“We concluded, with overwhelming statistical significance, that the IPCC’s climate data are contaminated with surface effects from industrialisation and data quality problems. These add up to a large warming bias,” he said...

...Terry Mills, professor of applied statistics and econometrics at Loughborough University, looked at the same data as the IPCC. He found that the warming trend it reported over the past 30 years or so was just as likely to be due to random fluctuations as to the impacts of greenhouse gases. Mills’s findings are to be published in Climatic Change, an environmental journal.

“The earth has gone through warming spells like these at least twice before in the last 1,000 years,” he said... Full story

Excerpt 2, from the Daily Mail, contains some damaging admissions from Dr. Phil Jones, one of the key scientists responsible for the man-made, global warming theory:

...He further admitted that in the last 15 years there had been no ‘statistically significant’ warming, although he argued this was a blip rather than the long-term trend.

And he said that the debate over whether the world could have been even warmer than now during the medieval period, when there is evidence of high temperatures in northern countries, was far from settled.

Sceptics believe there is strong evidence that the world was warmer between about 800 and 1300 AD than now because of evidence of high temperatures in northern countries.

But climate change advocates have dismissed this as false or only applying to the northern part of the world.

Professor Jones departed from this consensus when he said: ‘There is much debate over whether the Medieval Warm Period was global in extent or not. The MWP is most clearly expressed in parts of North America, the North Atlantic and Europe and parts of Asia.

‘For it to be global in extent, the MWP would need to be seen clearly in more records from the tropical regions and the Southern hemisphere. There are very few palaeoclimatic records for these latter two regions.

‘Of course, if the MWP was shown to be global in extent and as warm or warmer than today, then obviously the late 20th Century warmth would not be unprecedented. On the other hand, if the MWP was global, but was less warm than today, then the current warmth would be unprecedented.’

Sceptics said this was the first time a senior scientist working with the IPCC had admitted to the possibility that the Medieval Warming Period could have been global, and therefore the world could have been hotter then than now.... Full story

In other words, the science that Al Gore so famously said was settled, does not seem to be settled at all.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Promising US Olympic speedskater traded skates for religious habit

Reminiscent of the Oakland A's minor leaguer who recently gave up his baseball career to pursue the priesthood, Yahoo profiles a promising US speedskater who gave up a chance at Olympic gold to become a nun.
Twelve years ago at the Winter Olympics in Nagano, a 17-year-old speedskating prodigy named Kirstin Holum was tapped for future greatness.

When Holum placed sixth in the 3,000 meters – one of the most grueling disciplines in the women’s program, a lung-scraping four-minute bust of lactic acid torture – speedskating insiders predicted a golden future and speculated she may not even reach her peak for another decade...

BREAK

...From that point on, her life began an entirely different journey.

“Speedskating was such a huge part of my life,” Holumn said in a telephone interview with Yahoo! Sports. “I still loved the sport, but I had this incredibly strong calling that it was time to move on and take a different path in life.”

There is no television and no internet at St. Joseph’s Convent in Leeds, England, meaning Holum won’t get to watch the Winter Olympics where she was supposed to become a star.

The peaceful surrounds of the convent is where Holum, now known as Sister Catherine, devotes her life to religious service as a Franciscan nun. That calling had begun on a trip to Our Lady of Fatima, a holy site in Portugal famed for a series of religious visions that appeared nearly a century ago. It was outside the Fatima basilica where Holum decided that a path of religious dedication, not frozen skating lanes, would be her destiny.

“It is funny now to think of how different my life is now,” she said. “I had the wonderful privilege of being able to compete as an Olympian, and now I am blessed to able to serve God and help those less fortunate.”

After completing an art degree, including a thesis on the Olympics at the Art Institute of Chicago, Holum joined the Franciscan Sisters of the Renewal, a faith whose mission is “work with the poor and homeless and evangelization.”

Based first in New York, Sister Catherine and her fellow nuns stepped onto the mean streets of the Bronx to work with some of the Big Apple’s most underprivileged children in areas steeped in gang culture. Such work and sacrifice in homeless shelters and soup kitchens gave her a deep-rooted sense of satisfaction that skating had never been able to provide.

She attacked each new project with the tenacity of an Olympian, and, according to Sister Lucille, who leads operations at the order’s Bronx chapter, the “compassion of an angel.”

“It is wonderful to see people’s faces light up when Sister Catherine shares her experiences of her time in speedskating,” Sister Lucille said. “She never boasts about it but she has come to realize that we are incredibly proud of her and are lucky to have her as part of our religious family. The sisters and the people we try to reach love hearing about what she accomplished.”

Last year, missionary work took Sister Catherine to England, where she has found her previous life as an athlete a useful tool in providing some “street cred” when dealing with skeptical youngsters... Full story

Photo credit: Mike Powell, Allsport

The most hilarious quote of the year...

...comes to us courtesy of Joe Biden who, being interviewed by Larry King, said the following:

"I am very optimistic about -- about Iraq. I mean, this could be one of the great achievements of this administration. You're going to see 90,000 American troops come marching home by the end of the summer. You're going to see a stable government in Iraq that is actually moving toward a representative government. "

Andrew Malcolm, blogging for the LA Times, masterfully takes apart Biden's ridiculous attempt to take credit for Iraq:

...The statement claiming credit for the ultimately favorable outcome in Iraq was striking to many. This is because:

a) Obama had opposed the war from the beginning,

b) both Obama and Biden opposed the U.S. troop surge of 2007 by President George W. Bush widely credited with producing the relative peace and stability to enable a U.S. exit,

c) both Obama and Biden predicted incorrectly that the troop surge would actually worsen sectarian strife there. Watch this Obama video interview from MSNBC in 2007:


d) Biden even proposed partitioning the country into separate areas, and

e) the status of forces agreement with Iraq that established the ongoing U.S. troop withdrawal was negotiated by the preceding Republican administration long before Obama took the oath of office twice.

Other than that, however, the Obama-Biden team would seem to deserve all the credit...

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Oprah profiles the Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist

The Dominican Sisters of Mary, Mother of the Eucharist, a vibrant and growing religious order of Catholic teaching nuns, were profiled on The Oprah Winfrey Show last week.

The order, founded only about a decade ago, has been a huge success story and has grown from just four nuns to about a hundred in that short period of time. The nuns have an average age of 26 years old.

I never would have expected to see something like this on Oprah and must say that all involved did an excellent job. Given the size of Oprah's viewership, it is exciting to think of all of the people who could potentially touched by this segment.

Video clips from the show appear below. They are worth a viewing.

VIDEO 1:



VIDEO 2:



VIDEO 3:



VIDEO 4:

Notable quote: Marco Rubio


Marco Rubio, who is running for a US Senate seat in Florida, has really seen his campaign take off in recent weeks.

In an interview with National Review Online, he states:
...This election is about more than Republicans versus Democrats or liberals versus conservatives. It is a choice about the very essence of what this country is going to be like. Are we going to continue to be a place of limited government, free enterprise, and personal liberty? Or, are we going to become a country like so many around the world where the government dominates every sector of society? The problem is that the people in charge right now in Washington don’t believe in limited government or in the free-enterprise system. They don’t support it. They see it as something that creates pockets of prosperity, but, by and large, think it is unfair and want to change it. They want the U.S. to move away from that. They won’t campaign on that, of course, because they know they won’t get elected if they say it, but that’s exactly what they want to do, and they’re using this downturn in the economy as an excuse... Source
I could not have said it better myself!

Photo credit: PARCBENCH

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Editorial: Are we spending our way into oblivion?

I find myself increasingly discouraged about the long-term economic prospects of our nation.

Decades of fiscal irresponsibility by both political parties in Washington have left us in a mess. Massive debt and a looming entitlements crisis threaten our economic future. In the face of these problems, our politicians continue to be incapable of making the tough choices necessary for us to live within our means.

One would think the current economic crisis would be a wake-up call, but those in charge seem determined to hit the snooze button over and over. Sixteen months after the wake-up call, and no plan of any substance has been put forward by the Administration to put us on a path to fiscal responsibility.

President Obama, aided and abetted by the Democrat-controlled Congress, seems to believe the solution to our problems is a large and permanent increase in government spending. Talk about throwing gasoline on a fire!

A year ago, calls for a temporary, short-term increase in government spending to ease the pain of the economic crisis were not unreasonable (though perhaps debatable). Instead, what we got from the Democrats was a massive, long-term increase in government spending on a variety of pet projects that had little to do with immediate economic relief.

Fast forward one year. A couple of weeks ago the President released his new budget. Over the next decade, he proposes even higher spending levels than he did a year ago!

The President is now proposing to spend, over the next decade, an additional $1.6 trillion dollars above and beyond what he proposed last year (see chart below).

Spend. Spend. Spend.

When is it going to end?

H/T to the Corner for the graph.

Monday, February 8, 2010

Humorous, yet serious

The Answer: Yes. Most definitely, yes.

The Question:

Source: Minnesota Public Radio via the Corner

Notable Quote

Jackson Diehl of the Washington Post writes:
...Unlike most of his predecessors, Obama has not forged close ties with any European leader. Britain's Brown, France's Sarkozy and Germany's Merkel have each, in turn, felt snubbed by him. Relations between Obama and Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu are tense at best. George W. Bush used to hold regular videoconferences with Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki and Afghan President Hamid Karzai. Obama has spoken to them on only a handful of occasions...
An interesting observation given President Obama's oft-repeated assertion during that campaign that George Bush had ignored and alienated our allies and that he (Obama) would repair those relationships and restore our standing in the world.

Looks like yet another campaign promise left unkept.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

A Must Read: New York Times Magazine profiles Robert George

The New York Times Magazine recently profiled Princeton Professor Robert P. George, considered by many to be the leading intellect of orthodox Catholicism.

The piece is fascinating and worth the read:
On a September afternoon, about 60 prominent Christians assembled in the library of the Metropolitan Club on the east side of Central Park. It was a gathering of unusual diversity and power. Many in attendance were conservative evangelicals like the born-again Watergate felon Chuck Colson, who helped initiate the meeting. Metropolitan Jonah, the primate of the Orthodox Church in America, was there as well. And so were more than half a dozen of this country’s most influential Roman Catholic bishops, including Archbishop Timothy Dolan of New York, Archbishop John Myers of Newark and Cardinal Justin Rigali of Philadelphia.

At the center of the event was Robert P. George, a Princeton University professor of jurisprudence and a Roman Catholic who is this country’s most influential conservative Christian thinker. Dressed in his usual uniform of three-piece suit, New College, Oxford cuff links and rimless glasses­, George convened the meeting with a note of thanks and a reminder of its purpose. Alarmed at the liberal takeover of Washington and an apparent leadership vacuum among the Christian right, the group had come together to warn the country’s secular powers that the culture wars had not ended. As a starting point, George had drafted a 4,700-word manifesto that promised resistance to the point of civil disobedience against any legislation that might implicate their churches or charities in abortion, embryo-destructive research or same-sex marriage.

Two months later, at a Washington press conference to present the group’s “Manhattan Declaration,” George stepped aside to let Cardinal Rigali sum up just what made the statement, and much of George’s work, distinctive. These principles did not belong to the Christian faith alone, the cardinal declared; they rested on a foundation of universal reason. “They are principles that can be known and honored by men and women of good will even apart from divine revelation,” Rigali said. “They are principles of right reason and natural law.”

Even marriage between a man and a woman, Rigali continued, was grounded not just in religion and tradition but in logic. “The true great goods of marriage — the unitive and the procreative goods — are inextricably bound together such that the complementarity of husband and wife is of the very essence of marital communion,” the cardinal continued, ascending into philosophical abstractions surely lost on most in the room. “Sexual relations outside the marital bond are contrary not only to the will of God but to the good of man. Indeed, they are contrary to the will of God precisely because they are against the good of man.”

George looked on with arms crossed and lips sealed. But he was obviously pleased. To anyone who knew George’s work, the cardinal’s words sounded very much as if George had written them, and when I asked him about it later, he acknowledged providing assistance. Rigali’s remarks were a summation of the distinctive moral philosophy that is the foundation of George’s power.

He has parlayed a 13th-century Catholic philosophy into real political influence. Glenn Beck, the Fox News talker and a big George fan, likes to introduce him as “one of the biggest brains in America,” or, on one broadcast, “Superman of the Earth.” Karl Rove told me he considers George a rising star on the right and a leading voice in persuading President George W. Bush to restrict embryonic stem-cell research. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia told me he numbers George among the most-talked-about thinkers in conservative legal circles. And Newt Gingrich called him “an important and growing influence” on the conservative movement, especially on matters like abortion and marriage.

“If there really is a vast right-wing conspiracy,” the conservative Catholic journal Crisis concluded a few years ago, “its leaders probably meet in George’s kitchen.” ...Continued

Monday, February 1, 2010

President Obama proposes new budget - Part 3

The below chart shows the President is not serious about fiscal responsibility.

Why is he growing the budget in every year moving forward?

From the Heritage Foundation:

President Obama proposes new budget - Part 2

More from the Corner on the newly proposed budget (this from Robert Costa):

Rep. Paul Ryan (R., Wis.), the ranking member of the House Budget Committee, tells National Review Online that President Obama’s budget “is not like most budgets, with some tax-code tinkering and spending.” No, he says, “this budget is a choice. We are about to make a decision whose consequences will last for generations.”

“This budget presents a choice of two futures,” Ryan says. “Don’t look at the president’s rhetoric, look at his actions. His substance implies a different reality. Not only is this budget worse than the last one, but it triples our debt within ten years, features gushers of tax increases, and relies on some partisan commission to do the heavy lifting on fiscal policy after the next election. Make no mistake: This is a budget aimed to advance the administration’s philosophy and ideology. By increasing taxes and letting the country spiral into debt, this budget is a firm step toward transforming America into a collectivist society overseen by a social-welfare state.”

“The fiscal future of America, however, is still in the hands of the people,” says Ryan. “It is not too late to turn things around and inject our economy with the freedom to grow. Republicans have offered voters a roadmap. The president, CBO, and Peter Orzag have all acknowledged that it is a credible plan. We want to talk to the American people, and listen to them, like adults, with crystal-clear alternatives based upon the founding principles of this country and let them decide. This budget is about more than specific programs or policies. It is really about the American idea, and whether we want to move towards a European-style welfare state. I know that seems like those are big words, but those are the stakes. It is hard to come to another conclusion when you look at our debt and how we are spending. We are in a very dire fiscal situation.”

This year, Ryan says, “will be the year for the GOP to show Americans that they are no longer the opposition party, but the alternative party. The president acknowledged that in Baltimore last week. We had a good discussion, and I’m happy he came, but at the end of the day, we come to this from a different premise. We believe that the individual is the nucleus of American life, and they see the government in that role. That is our big difference.”

“This is a choice of two futures,” he reiterates. “It’s not too late to make the right decision.

President Obama proposes new budget - Part 1

It looks like it is full speed ahead on government spending with massive deficits as far as the eye can see.

President Obama says he is concerned about deficits, but you would never know it based on his actions.

Here is an interesting analysis from the Heritage foundation that I came across over at the Corner:

Obama Adds $2 Trillion in Spending and Deficits to Last Year’s Budget

One would think the nation’s deteriorating fiscal picture would cause the White House to scale back it spending-and-debt spree. Think again. Over the ten years in which both budgets overlap (FY 2010–2019), this year’s budget would spend an additional $1.7 trillion and run up an additional $2 trillion in budget deficits. In fact, this year’s proposal shows annual budget deficits as much as 49 percent larger than last year’s proposalraising the debt by an additional 6 percent of GDP over the same period. It is a spending spree that will drive up both taxes and deficits.

According to our quick analysis of his budget, the president’s budget also would:

* Permanently expand the federal government by nearly 3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) over 2007 pre-recession levels;

* Raise taxes on all Americans by more than $2 trillion over the next decade (counting health-care reform and cap-and-trade);


* Raise taxes for 3.2 million small businesses and upper-income taxpayers by an average of $300,000 over the next decade;


* Borrow 42 cents for each dollar spent in 2010;


* Run a $1.6 trillion deficit in 2010 — $143 billion higher than the recession-driven 2009 deficit;


* Leave permanent deficits that top $1 trillion in as late as 2020 — a time of assumed peace and prosperity; and

* Double the publicly held national debt to over $18 trillion.

Before the recession, federal spending totaled $24,000 per U.S. household. President Obama would hike it to $36,000 per household by 2020 — an inflation-adjusted $12,000-per-household expansion of government. Even the steep tax increases planned for all taxpayers would not finance all of this spending: The president’s budget would add trillions of dollars in new debt.

President Obama has offered a budget that does nothing to address the nation’s serious short-term and long-term fiscal problems — and indeed makes them worse. By doubling the national debt over pre-recession levels, America could head toward the tipping point when rising debt levels will become too large for global capital markets to absorb, potentially triggering a financial crisis, an interest-rate spike, and gigantic tax increases.

The president who
said, “I didn’t come here to pass our problems on to the next president or the next generation — I’m here to solve them would, over the next decade, pass $75,000 per household in additional debt into the laps of our children and grandchildren.

Brian Riedl is Grover M. Hermann fellow in federal budgetary affairs at the Heritage Foundation.