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Archive for May, 2011

May 31 2011

Thankful, and thoughtful too

Published by under Chuck Holton

Memorial day is a day to remember – and to honor – those who have sacrificed their lives for the cause of freedom. So few people know what honor means anymore that it bears defining: it means we value what they have done for us.

It means we should take a moment and look inward, thinking about how costly our liberty is and asking if we are making full use of that liberty in a way that shows what a rare, precious gift it really is.

If your parents gave up vacations and evenings out, worked extra hours or even a second job in order to send you to college, it would be incredibly disrespectful if you spent your college years skipping classes to go out partying. In the same way, how we use our freedom indicates the value we ascribe to it.

If, like most Americans, you choose to waste your life as a spectator, a mere consumer, you show by your actions a disdain for the high price paid for your liberty. After all, it doesn’t take much freedom to sit and watch television. Many prison inmates do that.

So ask yourself a difficult question this Memorial day: How can I make the most of the liberty I’ve been given? Chances are you could do more with it by following the example set by Jesus himself, who spent his time on earth improving and redeeming everything around him.

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May 26 2011

Memorial Day 2011

Published by under LtCol North

QUANTICO NATIONAL CEMETERY — When I was a kid, we called May 30 “Decoration Day.” It was an occasion for Boy Scouts to be up before dawn and report, in uniform, to the American Legion hall. There, Cub Scouts would be…

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May 19 2011

Dancing With Arafat’s Ghost

Published by under LtCol North

WASHINGTON, D.C. — On Thursday, Barack Obama went to the State Department to “mark a new chapter in American diplomacy.” The president’s handlers boldly billed his lengthy address “A Moment of Opportunity” for the…

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May 12 2011

Now What?

Published by under LtCol North

QUANTICO, Va. — Here at this sprawling Marine Corps base south of our nation’s capital, nothing has changed since Osama bin Laden met his demise in Pakistan. Thousands of Marines here at the “Crossroads of the Corps”…

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May 06 2011

The case for Proof

Published by under Chuck Holton

The White House today announced that they had decided not to release photos of Osama Bin Laden’s corpse, something which has been widely called for by people around the world who want proof that the man killed in the daring raid Sunday night was, in fact, the mastermind of the 9/11 attacks. 

The administration has been very deliberate about everything with regards to this mission.  President Obama reportedly “slept on it” before giving the final go-ahead, waiting sixteen hours to sign the order for Navy SEALS to execute the mission.  Once the target was killed, Osama Bin Laden’s body was treated in accordance with Muslim custom, but the decision was made to bury the body at sea in order to avoid creating a shrine for the continuation of the cult of Osama.

On Monday’s CBN Midday edition, I made the point that by not releasing proof of death, the administration would be fueling the cultural tendency of muslim nations to believe conspiracy theories, and indeed, claims that Bin Laden is not dead already abound.  I still hold to the belief that we must provide some proof to the world, though a photo would arguably be the weakest form of proof we could show, since photos can be made to look like anything these days. 

A much better idea would have been to bring in impartial experts from countries like Jordan and the UAE to view and even perhaps test the body, then report on their findings.  This would have meant disregarding the standard Muslim practice of burying their dead within 24 hours, but if the Muslim street wanted to raise a hue and cry over that, we could simply point out that if Osama was a good Muslim, then Islam is not, in fact, a religion of peace, since Osama Bin Laden was without a doubt an evil murderer of thousands of innocent people.

If there’s one thing that has been made clear about Islamic culture, however, it is that irony is not a concept they understand.  Nevertheless, while I understand the administration’s reasoning behind not releasing the death photo (i.e. not wanting to appear to be “spiking the football,”) I still think that some form of proof should be released, even if it is shown only to select influential people from the Muslim community.

In closing, I would like to stress that the death of any man, even one who is patently evil, is not cause for celebration.  What is worth celebrating is that this man will no longer be able to perpetrate his evil on the world.  It’s a subtle distinction, but as believers, an important one.   If ultimate justice is made sweeter by the decade of waiting in this case, imagine what it will be like when God’s perfect justice is finally meted out, especially for those whose sins have already been paid for.

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May 05 2011

Killing Osama

Published by under LtCol North

WASHINGTON, D.C. — It took nine years, seven months and 21 days to pinpoint the man who plotted, paid for and perpetrated the terror attacks of 9-11-01. When a U.S. Navy SEAL team finally found Osama bin Laden in the…

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