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October 2008 Archives

October 1, 2008

Bailout America day

President Bush went on TV yesterday looking dire, saying that every day the economic bailout is delayed poses increased risks and costs to our nation's and the world's economy. Yikes. How would you like to be a congressman with that kind of pressure to pass legislation? This is the kind of decision that will have a profound impact in many areas, and every detail is important. I would not want to rush into it, but rather make sure everything is done right. Again, it's a good day to pray for our lawmakers and the future of our country.
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Our church is celebrating "Missions Week" when missionaries from around the globe come and talk about their experiences. My family hosted a dinner for a dozen people last night with a local missionary who works at a Christian radio station. The station plays Christian rock and rap, geared for teens and young audiences.
This is such an important ministry because teens today are bombarded with negative images in the media, MTV, advertisements, commercials, adn the Net. They definitely need something uplifting. The Christian rock station offers kids positive and wholesome songs, recorded with high-quality studio production in a wide variety of styles.
Christian music has come a long way in the last 20 years and provides a worthwhile and quality alternative to young listeners.
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Today is Eid ul-Fitr, or "Feast of Fast Breaking," when Muslims celebrate the end of Ramadan. I'm heading out to one of the local mosques to write about the Islamic holiday.
Yesterday, I finally had the chance to watch "Obsession," the controversial DVD about radical Muslims.
While there are truths to the documentary (there have to be, otherwise the documentary would not merit any concern at all) it also distorted many things and made some dangerous and hateful correlations.
Linking Islamic extremists to Nazi Germany, for example, is a totally unfair assertion that seeks to incite hatred and fear. Those are totally different scenarios and the comparison is invalid.
To its credit, the documentary does state clearly in the introduction that the majority of Muslims are peaceful, law-abiding citizens. It's only a very small percentage who are out to destroy America and the West, who denounce us, burn U.S. flags, and call us "the Great Satan."
But that small percentage of radicals are the ones who attacked America on 9/11, blew up the London subway and the Madrid trains, killed more than 200 Marines in Lebanon, killed hundreds at a Bali nightclub, etc. It is a very small faction, but one that is too dangerous to be ignored.
It's a tragedy for the 99-plus percent of good Muslims whose lives and reputations have suffered because of the deeds and threats of a few maniacal extremists. The vast majority of good Muslims have suffered the most. They have, as I've been told many times, had their religion hijacked by radicals.
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Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 1, 2008

October 2, 2008

Signs of the times

One of my pet peeves is poorly written signage, either with bad grammar (mens room, for example), or sloppy thinking. I mean, by their very nature, signs are meant for public display and consumption.
The creators of the signs must realize that whatever their sign says will be read by many people, some of whom are going to be writers or editors. If they are unsure of the wording, punctuation, spelling or grammar, they have time to check it out. Consult a dictionary. Ask an expert. Google it.
One of the most annoying signs, in my opinion, that is popping up all over the country is:
NO PED XING
That is such a linguistic atrocity, and yet it is gaining in popularity.
There are lots of cutesy short cut words like "thru" and "nite" instead of through and night. They're probably technically acceptable by now, unfortunately.

Church signs are another source of bewilderment. The purpose, one would think, is to attract the "unchurched" passersby, to entice them to attend the church. There have been some very good ones -- such as "CedarCreek Church sucks -- signed, Satan."
There's a little church down the street from me that seems to dredge up the worst possible slogans, ones that either cause you to scratch your head and wonder what it means, or else it seems so out of touch with society that it would repel any potential customers.
I drove by tonight and here's the latest catchphrase:

LOOK TO THE ROCK
FROM WHICH YOU
WERE HEWN

Do you think that is going to cause sinners to put on their best suits and race to church on Sunday morning?
This is just the latest in a long line of bizarre and counterproductive church signs. I'm going to start keeping a list of the most incredibly bad church signs.
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Flash: The U.S. Senate passed the economic rescue bill. I don't think the senators really knew what they were passing, it was voted on under such tremendous deadline pressure. The house is now up to bat.
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I spent the morning at a local mosque for Eid ul-Fitr, the Muslim holiday marking the end of Ramadan. It was a joyous occasion and I was glad to hear the imam preach a strong message of love and peace. The mosque was jammed -- people were crowded outside the doors and an overflow room carried the service on closed circuit TV.
For Muslims, the Eid ul-Fitr is like Christmas to Christians. A lot of Muslims who don't go to the mosque all year will show up for this holiday.
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Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 1, 2008

October 4, 2008

B.B. King in concert

Saw the legendary bluesman Riley B. King, aka B.B. King, in concert at Toledo's Stranahan Theater on Thursday night. It was a nice evening but Mr. King did a bit too much talking and joking, I would have preferred to hear more music.
I tried to be respectful but honest, as always, in my concert review, which you can read here.

This may be the last time the 83-year-old blues legend comes to Toledo -- although he may still be touring for years, who knows. I thought it was worth the effort to document this show.

Those pics on the Blade's website that ran with my review were mine, although there's no credit line. I love my Panasonic Lumix FZ camera.

Here are a few more photos I took at B.B.'s concert, from about the 12th row:

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Sylvania, Ohio
October 4, 2008


Governors, Killer Priests and Sparrows

Claudia Vercellotti, the Toledo co-coordinator of SNAP, met with Governor Ted Strickland this week and their conversation turned to crime and cover-ups in Toledo. Claudia told him about the Gerald Robinson case. The governor said he was aware of it. They had a long talk about it and Claudia mentioned my book. Governor Strickland was interested. Claudia promised to send him a copy. We shall see what we shall see.
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I got several letters and many emails congratulating me on my recent journalism awards, including notes from State Sen. Teresa Fedor and attorney Jon Richardson. It's nice to hear positive comments from so many people -- so thanks to everyone who wrote, I greatly appreciate it.
I'm going to have to make it a point to enter more contests.
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I was walking past some bushes this morning when a few sparrows darted out and flew away.
It's a common sight but today it had an unusual impact on me.
Like many Americans, and undoubtedly Europeans and Asians and Africans as well, I've been watching the news about the economy with trepidation and concern.
Even though Congress passed the emergency bailout package and Bush signed it immediately yesterday, there are some questions about how successful this rescue plan will be. And then you wonder, how did we get into this mess in the first place? I've read a lot about it but there is still a lot of mystery and vagaries in what we're being told.
I'm ever the optimist, but the stock market turmoil is downright scary. My, and other people's, long-term financial goals and retirement plans are on the line.
Meanwhile, the news business is going through the most foundational shift since Gutenberg invented the printing press. Newspapers around the country are cutting back, laying off workers, trying to find ways to stay healthy and profitable. It's a bit ironic that one of the main reasons I got into the news business in the first place was for its stability.
So in these uncertain times, a sparrow flies past and reminds me of Jesus' reassuring words to his disciples (in Luke 12):

Are not five sparrows sold for two pennies? And [yet] not one of them is forgotten or uncared for in the presence of God. But [even] the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Do not be struck with fear or seized with alarm; you are of greater worth than many [flocks] of sparrows.

(Incidentally, James Patterson uses "canaries" instead of sparrows in The Message version of the Bible, but the prevailing image is sparrows).

The world may be in turmoil and people all around us may be losing their heads in general -- and their tails in the stock market -- but I honestly believe God is in control and cares for us, more than the sparrow.
Jehovah Jireh, God is the Provider.
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Toledo, Ohio
Oct. 4, 2008

October 6, 2008

Movies, books and demons

Did you sleep better this weekend knowing the government is going to try to bail out the teetering financial institutions? 60 Minutes had a segment last night about how Wall Street created this disaster and some of the execs who were earning $50 million to $100 million a year are now turning to taxpayers to pay their corporate tabs.
Nice deal for them.
Update: The stock market took a major dive today, dropping below 10,000 for the first time since 2004. There doesn't seem to be much confidence among investors in the government's $700,000,000,000 bailout plan.
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I wrote another item about the movie Fireproof being a surprise hit in the box office and producing a best-selling book. You can read it here.
I see it earned $4.1 million last weekend, which pushes the total grossed in two weekends at $12.4 million. Not bad for a $500,000 investment.
By comparison, Bill Maher's Religulous earned $3.5 million in its opening weekend. The movie blasts all religions and militantly promotes atheism. Even most mainstream critics don't like the film because of its insulting, condescending tone. One critic said Maher did what few people could do: Make Michael Moore look like a nice guy.
The book from Fireproof, called The Love Dare, was created after the movie. It had been a plot device in the film, and the Kendricks Brothers decided to make it a real book and maybe help some people trying to save their marriage. It already has sold 300,000 copies. You need to sell 40,000 to make the best-seller list.
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My book club is meeting to discuss "Blue Like Jazz" by Donald Miller. Have you read it? It's been out a while. It's a sincere biographical look at institutional religion and God written by a disillusioned 30-something who was raised in the church.
I like Miller's personable, unpretentious writing and his eye for nailing hypocrites and charlatans, but he does tend to whine a bit. This book touched a lot of people in his generation, however, and it became a best-seller and opened the door for a successful writing career for Miller.
Update: I just got a note today that Miller is speaking at the University of Toledo on Friday.
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I'm having lunch with The Exorcist today -- Bob Larson, a man who has cast out more than 6,000 demons in 90 countries. I watched him perform an exorcism nearly three years ago and wrote about it, and the story generated a lot of attention both good and bad.
I'm not sure what I'm going to write this time but I didn't want to pass up the opportunity to meet with this controversial, interesting man.
I think people discount him because they don't believe demons exist. I believe they are real, although it's something that is hard to verify, quantify, and/or write about. Unless you're a fiction writer like Dan Brown or William Peter Blatty.
I did a quick Bible search and found 104 references to the word "demon". Jesus certainly talked about them a lot and cast them out of people.
What do you think about demons, possession and exorcism in the 21st century?
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Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 6, 2008

Chief Seattle's prophetic speech

This speech was given by Chief Seattle in January of 1854, to territorial governor Isaac Stevens, negotiating a treaty with the native people of the Pacific Northwest. The exact text is the subject of great debate, but even if this isn't word for word, I thought it's worth sharing with you in light of the new 'Greening of America', which isn't that new after all.

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Yonder sky that has wept tears of compassion upon my people for centuries untold, and which to us appears changeless and eternal, may change. Today is fair. Tomorrow it may be overcast with clouds. My words are like the stars that never change. Whatever Seattle says, the great chief at Washington can rely upon with as much certainty as he can upon the return of the sun or the seasons. The white chief says that Big Chief at Washington sends us greetings of friendship and goodwill. This is kind of him for we know he has little need of our friendship in return. His people are many. They are like the grass that covers vast prairies. My people are few. They resemble the scattering trees of a storm-swept plain. The great, and I presume -- good, White Chief sends us word that he wishes to buy our land but is willing to allow us enough to live comfortably. This indeed appears just, even generous, for the Red Man no longer has rights that he need respect, and the offer may be wise, also, as we are no longer in need of an extensive country.

There was a time when our people covered the land as the waves of a wind-ruffled sea cover its shell-paved floor, but that time long since passed away with the greatness of tribes that are now but a mournful memory. I will not dwell on, nor mourn over, our untimely decay, nor reproach my paleface brothers with hastening it, as we too may have been somewhat to blame.

Youth is impulsive. When our young men grow angry at some real or imaginary wrong, and disfigure their faces with black paint, it denotes that their hearts are black, and that they are often cruel and relentless, and our old men and old women are unable to restrain them. Thus it has ever been. Thus it was when the white man began to push our forefathers ever westward. But let us hope that the hostilities between us may never return. We would have everything to lose and nothing to gain. Revenge by young men is considered gain, even at the cost of their own lives, but old men who stay at home in times of war, and mothers who have sons to lose, know better.

Our good father in Washington--for I presume he is now our father as well as yours, since King George has moved his boundaries further north--our great and good father, I say, sends us word that if we do as he desires he will protect us. His brave warriors will be to us a bristling wall of strength, and his wonderful ships of war will fill our harbors, so that our ancient enemies far to the northward -- the Haidas and Tsimshians -- will cease to frighten our women, children, and old men. Then in reality he will be our father and we his children. But can that ever be? Your God is not our God! Your God loves your people and hates mine! He folds his strong protecting arms lovingly about the paleface and leads him by the hand as a father leads an infant son. But, He has forsaken His Red children, if they really are His. Our God, the Great Spirit, seems also to have forsaken us. Your God makes your people wax stronger every day. Soon they will fill all the land. Our people are ebbing away like a rapidly receding tide that will never return. The white man's God cannot love our people or He would protect them. They seem to be orphans who can look nowhere for help. How then can we be brothers? How can your God become our God and renew our prosperity and awaken in us dreams of returning greatness? If we have a common Heavenly Father He must be partial, for He came to His paleface children. We never saw Him. He gave you laws but had no word for His red children whose teeming multitudes once filled this vast continent as stars fill the firmament. No; we are two distinct races with separate origins and separate destinies. There is little in common between us.

To us the ashes of our ancestors are sacred and their resting place is hallowed ground. You wander far from the graves of your ancestors and seemingly without regret. Your religion was written upon tablets of stone by the iron finger of your God so that you could not forget. The Red Man could never comprehend or remember it. Our religion is the traditions of our ancestors -- the dreams of our old men, given them in solemn hours of the night by the Great Spirit; and the visions of our sachems, and is written in the hearts of our people.

Your dead cease to love you and the land of their nativity as soon as they pass the portals of the tomb and wander away beyond the stars. They are soon forgotten and never return. Our dead never forget this beautiful world that gave them being. They still love its verdant valleys, its murmuring rivers, its magnificent mountains, sequestered vales and verdant lined lakes and bays, and ever yearn in tender fond affection over the lonely hearted living, and often return from the happy hunting ground to visit, guide, console, and comfort them.

Day and night cannot dwell together. The Red Man has ever fled the approach of the White Man, as the morning mist flees before the morning sun. However, your proposition seems fair and I think that my people will accept it and will retire to the reservation you offer them. Then we will dwell apart in peace, for the words of the Great White Chief seem to be the words of nature speaking to my people out of dense darkness.

It matters little where we pass the remnant of our days. They will not be many. The Indian's night promises to be dark. Not a single star of hope hovers above his horizon. Sad-voiced winds moan in the distance. Grim fate seems to be on the Red Man's trail, and wherever he will hear the approaching footsteps of his fell destroyer and prepare stolidly to meet his doom, as does the wounded doe that hears the approaching footsteps of the hunter.

A few more moons, a few more winters, and not one of the descendants of the mighty hosts that once moved over this broad land or lived in happy homes, protected by the Great Spirit, will remain to mourn over the graves of a people once more powerful and hopeful than yours. But why should I mourn at the untimely fate of my people? Tribe follows tribe, and nation follows nation, like the waves of the sea. It is the order of nature, and regret is useless. Your time of decay may be distant, but it will surely come, for even the White Man whose God walked and talked with him as friend to friend, cannot be exempt from the common destiny. We may be brothers after all. We will see.

We will ponder your proposition and when we decide we will let you know. But should we accept it, I here and now make this condition that we will not be denied the privilege without molestation of visiting at any time the tombs of our ancestors, friends, and children. Every part of this soil is sacred in the estimation of my people. Every hillside, every valley, every plain and grove, has been hallowed by some sad or happy event in days long vanished. Even the rocks, which seem to be dumb and dead as the swelter in the sun along the silent shore, thrill with memories of stirring events connected with the lives of my people, and the very dust upon which you now stand responds more lovingly to their footsteps than yours, because it is rich with the blood of our ancestors, and our bare feet are conscious of the sympathetic touch. Our departed braves, fond mothers, glad, happy hearted maidens, and even the little children who lived here and rejoiced here for a brief season, will love these somber solitudes and at eventide they greet shadowy returning spirits. And when the last Red Man shall have perished, and the memory of my tribe shall have become a myth among the White Men, these shores will swarm with the invisible dead of my tribe, and when your children's children think themselves alone in the field, the store, the shop, upon the highway, or in the silence of the pathless woods, they will not be alone. In all the earth there is no place dedicated to solitude. At night when the streets of your cities and villages are silent and you think them deserted, they will throng with the returning hosts that once filled them and still love this beautiful land. The White Man will never be alone.

Let him be just and deal kindly with my people, for the dead are not powerless. Dead, did I say? There is no death, only a change of worlds.

October 7, 2008

An Exorcist's insights into Robinson

Had lunch today with Bob Larson, the man who kicks out demons for a living. He is a charismatic and controversial figure because of his strong personality and the nature of his ministry.

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For starters, a lot of people don't believe there are demons, so an exorcist seems like a joke or a charlatan to them. Second, Bob Larson's flair for the dramatic makes the skeptical even more suspicious.
He will be featured in a new reality tv show on the sci-fi channel called "The Real Exorcist." I'll be writing about it in the near future and will let you know when to look for it.
Bob has read "Sin,Shame & Secrets" and we spent a long time discussing the case and the possible demonic and satanic implications.
There is no way to really know what happened inside Gerald Robinson's head or in his soul, so we were only speculating. But Larson regularly deals with people who have demonic manifestations,having performed by his count well over 6,000 exorcisms.
He said Robinson could fit a category that he has seen many times in which a man was molested or traumatized as a child, and then suppressed those memories, creating something like an alter ego or a multiple personality. The core person carries on his life unaware of this trauma that is festering in this separate personality. But this other personality is living the trauma in the now, never dealing with it, never moving on. It becomes like a volcano ready to blow, Larson said. This personality is subject to demonic possession/oppression when it manifests.
It is possible that Robinson had this separate personality that rarely got out beyond his core personality. When it did, it was a violent and demonic personality out for destruction.
In many cases, the actions of this suppressed personality are not remembered by the core person. But a crime as heinous as the murder of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl would be unlikely to be totally suppressed, according to Larson.
Another thing he said is that a person who is living his life for the good and then gets angry at God is more likely to go from one extreme to another than is your typical law-abiding citizen. In other words, if Robinson devoted his life to serving God as a priest and then became mad at God and the church, he would be a logical candidate for satanism and demonic activity. Larson said he has seen people flip this switch many times.
As I said, Larson is only speaking in theory and generalities, not having met Robinson. But he does have a lot of experience in this area and certainly is one of the world's leading experts on demonic possession.
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Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 6, 2008

October 8, 2008

Church, diocese in court

I went to Lima, Ohio, yesterday to cover an appeals court hearing in a lawsuit by members of the closed St. James Parish in rural Kansas, Ohio, challenging the Toledo diocese over the right to access their former church building.
Here is a copy of the article that ran today.
As a synopsis, the unusual, if not unique, legal angle the ex-parishioners are taking is to argue that Bishop Leonard Blair was a trustee of the parish who failed to act in their best interests. They want the court to remove him as trustee and replace him with someone or some entity that will protect their interests. They are arguing strictly on civil law terms and say Canon Law does not apply in this case.
The ex-parishioners have spent well over $100,000 in legal fees and if they win, they'll have access to their old building but they don't know what they'll do with it.
All they know is they can never go back to being a Roman Catholic parish.
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Sylvania, Ohio
October 8, 2008

2 calendar notes

I'm scheduled to be on YES-FM radio tomorrow at 8:20 a.m. That's 89.3 FM in Toledo, and retransmitted on 88.5 in some counties. You also can listen online at www.yeshome.com.
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Donald Miller, author of "Blue Like Jazz," will be at the University of Toledo at 1:30 p.m. Friday in the Student Union, Room 2579.
I thought Miller was going to talk about his books, but now I see it's part of the "Barack Obama: Faith, Family & Values Tour." So be forewarned there is a political motive behind it.

Roots of economic crisis

A colleague was telling me that he watched the congressional hearings on the AIG $85 billion bailout yesterday and that one of the corporate honchos who kept claiming everything was all right ended up being fired -- with a $230 million severance package. Then, to top it off, AIG hired him as a consultant for $1 million a month. Small wonder Wall Street imploded.
Also, I received an email directing me to a 1999 NY Times article about subprime lending market, which really does give some important background for understanding the factors that led to the crisis.
Here's a link to that article.
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UPDATE: Here's an Associated Press story about AIG and the incredible profligacy of top executives even after the taxpayer bailout:

WASHINGTON (AP) — The White House said on Wednesday it was “despicable” that American International Group Inc. executives spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on a posh California retreat just days after getting a federal bailout.
Lawmakers investigating the meltdown of AIG said the retreat didn’t include anyone from the financial products division that nearly drove the company under, but they were still enraged that executives of AIG’s main U.S. life insurance subsidiary spent $440,000 on the retreat, complete with spa treatments, banquets and golf outings.
“It’s pretty despicable,” White House press secretary Dana Perino said.
AIG sent its executives to the coastal St. Regis resort south of Los Angeles even as the company tapped into an $85 billion loan from the government that it needed to stave off bankruptcy. The resort tab included $23,380 worth of spa treatments for AIG employees, according to invoices the resort turned over to the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee.
“The president did not want to move forward on this rescue package to help anybody in the top positions on Wall Street,” Perino said. “He was concerned about everyday people like you and me. ... He didn’t do that to help top executives and certainly not to help executives go to a spa.”

Toledo, Ohio
Oct. 8, 2008

October 10, 2008

Keeping an eye on government

As if beleagured Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson doesn't have enough worries these days with the economic meltdown, he was one of the people named in a lawsuit filed in federal court in Toledo yesterday on behalf of KindHearts.
KindHearts is a Muslim charity based in Toledo that was shut down by the Treasury in February, 2006, for suspected ties to terrorists in Lebanon.
Now obviously any U.S. group that is funneling money to terrorists in the Middle East should be shut down immediately, and the people responsible should be prosecuted.
But as of today, 2 1/2 years after the government closed the charity, we still don't know why they closed the organization.
And neither do KindHearts leaders or their attorneys.
If the government has reason to believe KindHearts did something wrong, then just like dealing with suspected illegal activities of any individual or group in the United States of America, charges should be filed and the accused should have their day in court.
Speaking theoretically, because we don't know what the government has in its files, what if KindHearts is completely innocent and never did anything wrong?
This organization was founded after 9/11 specifically because American Muslims had few charities they could trust. KindHearts' leaders knew they would undergo extreme scrutiny as a U.S. Muslim group in post-9/11 America. They told me they went out of their way to make sure every "t" was crossed and "i" was dotted, and sought guidance from the government to ensure they abided by all the laws.
And then what happened?
The government swept down on KindHearts offices, froze millions in assets, padlocked the doors, and effectively put the charity out of business without any charges being filed or the accused having a chance to defend themselves.
That is a lot of governmental power.
As I said earlier, if there were any illegal activities, especially anything supporting terrorism, then KindHearts should have been closed immediately, and the people responsible promptly prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
But due process needs to be followed. The accused have the right to a speedy trial.
This is still the United States of America.
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Sylvania, Ohio
October 10, 2008


October 11, 2008

Political opportunities

In 2004, I had the opportunity to interview Pearl Jam when the band played in Toledo to "Rock the Vote" for the Kerry campaign. I even got within two feet of Neil Young during the interview when he walked into the room, looked around, and walked out without a word. Strange looking dude up close, with a weird floppy hat on his oversized head, but a genuine legend and one of my personal musical heroes.

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Today I had the chance to interview Donald Miller, author of "Blue Like Jazz," one of my favorite "outside the franchise" books on Christianity, when he came to the University of Toledo to stump for Barack Obama.
Although I sit across the political aisle from these celebrities, I respect their opinions and the fact that they are out there doing something to promote their causes. It would be much easier to sit home and carry on their normal activities than to grind it out on the road for political ideals.
Miller was particularly interesting in that he is an evangelical Christian who supports a pro-choice Democrat. I think it shows how there is diversity within every group, that you can't go by stereotypes or paint with a broad brush.
He gave an articulate, reasonable and heartfelt explanation of why he so strongly supports Obama. It is quite involved and it's late and I don't want to dig into it here, but I wrote about it for tomorrow's paper (I'll post a link when it's online) and will summarize it thusly:
According to Miller, Obama is a man of faith, a Christian who talks about Jesus and the cross and redemption, and he goes to church and puts his faith into action. Although he supports abortion rights, he wants to take steps to reduce the number of abortions by promoting social justice programs and combatting poverty.
McCain, meanwhile, doesn't go to church and doesn't talk about faith and doesn't have a plan for reducing abortions. He would be "the first secular president," all this according to Miller.
That's it in a nutshell... And it is getting pretty nutty in Ohio as the election draws near.
I do like Miller personally, though. He speaks to college students where they're at. And I like that he not only urged them to vote, but to always be nice to people. "There's never any reason to be unkind," he said, then later said that was something he got from Ravi Zacharias.
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Late-breaking news, the Toledo diocese removed a priest from ministry yesterday. Father Lawrence F. Varney, 75, retired since 2002, was barred from ministry over credible allegations that he abused a minor nearly 30 years ago. That would have been in the late 1970s, a time when he was teaching at Toledo's Central Catholic High School.
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One more quick note: A colleague told me he and his wife went to see Fireproof because of my review. He is a Unitarian and said that at first he was put off by the Christian content of the film. But after a while he got into the story and by the end of the movie "I was weeping like a baby," he said.
After the movie, he and his wife talked for hours not only about their marriage but about the meaning of life and God and all the Big Questions.
If Fireproof can touch this couple that deeply, I think there's no limit to what the movie can do. There are hundreds of such testimonies on the movie's website but this is the most dramatic one I've heard personally.
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Denny Schaffer, the controversial radio personality who dominated the Toledo airwaves for 10 years or so, is speaking tonight at a banquet to raise money for YES-FM Christian radio. I'm looking forward to hearing Denny's testimony.
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Sylvania, Ohio
October 11, 2008

Solomon's divorce plan?

Remember how King Solomon threatened to have a baby cut in half when two women were fighting over custody? Maybe that's what inspired this divorce settlement. Or maybe they just wanted to start a halfway house...
Check out this bizarre AP story:

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Cambodian couple saw house in half in divorce

A couple in rural Cambodia has terminated their 18-year marriage with a divorce settlement that entailed sawing in two the wooden house they once shared, villagers said Friday. The husband, 42-year-old Moeun Sarim, has taken away with him all the bits and pieces of his half a house, said his 35-year-old wife, Vat Navy.

"Very strange, but this is what my husband wanted," she said by phone from a village about 62 miles east of Cambodia's capital, Phnom Penh. She said they ended their marriage last month.

"He brought his relatives and used saws to cut the house in half," she said, adding that she now owns the other half that is still standing. The house is made from wood with a tile roof and propped up on wooden pillars, a typical style for a Cambodian country home.

She said her estranged husband and his relatives, after ripping apart half of the house, carried all the debris to his parents' house nearby.

She said the divorce was prompted by her husband's jealousy about her alleged relationship with a policeman in the village. She denied having an extramarital affair.

"He wanted a divorce, and I said, `Let's divorce,'" she said.

The husband could not be reached for comment.

Bou Bout, a village chief, said local officials and police were present as witnesses the day the couple split their 20-by-24 1/2 foot house into half.

"Local officials tried three times to get them to mend their differences, but the husband would not budge," Bou Bout said by phone.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
October 11, 2008

October 12, 2008

Rusty Monroe's legacy

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Margaret "Rusty" Monroe and Jon Hendricks

You meet a lot of people when you work for a newspaper. Some of them earn a special place in your heart and mind and memories. One of the people who meant a lot to me is Rusty Monroe, who I'm sad to say passed away yesterday at age 89.
She was the longtime owner of Rusty's Jazz Cafe in South Toledo, a place where you could go seven nights a week to hear live jazz, which in itself is an incredible accomplishment. Even in her 70s she worked long days and nights and not for profit but for people.
Her love of people and jazz helped so many aspiring musicians get their careers started.
She was always encouraging, open-minded to music and ideas, quick to laugh, devoted to friends and family, and dressed to pefection with her hair and her makeup done.
Rusty was a lady in the highest sense of the word.
Her funky little club not only had live jazz, but it had chess tables and a fireplace where you could roast marshmallows (even during concerts) and always home-made food in a low-priced buffet.
She didn't mind if some college kids sat in the back, drank cofee and played chess all night. It didn't bring in any money for her but it gave the students a safe place to hang out and kept them out of trouble, she'd tell me.
I remember when she let a band of young Toledo musicians play in her club. They were definitely 100 percent rock and didn't fit into the jazz category at all. But Rusty laughed and told me, "I call them jazz-rock." She just wanted to give musicians a little boost and found a weeknight slot for them.
When she would get a call asking if she knew a drummer or a bassist because some group needed anothe rmusician, she'd flip through her thick address book and find someone who not only was a good musician but also needed work and a few extra dollars.
One time I was there to see a Russian bluegrass-jazz band called Kukaruza. The musicians got there early and wandered around the club, smiling deeply and soaking it all in. They told me that had heard of Rusty's in Moscow and were thrilled to be there. In Moscow! That's how big a reputation Rusty's Jazz Cafe had.
I saw so many terrific local musicians play there, as well as some national artists. Maynard Ferguson performed there regularly. Wynton Marsalis dropped in after a local concert and played a few songs. Alexander Zonjic used to play Rusty's all the time, driving down from Detroit and cramming his gear onto that tiny stage, not to make a buck but only because he loved Rusty so much and she had called and asked.
Who could say no to Rusty?
She knew her time was short. I spoke with her a few weeks ago. Her cancer had recurred and there was no way to fight it. But she was at peace. "I had a good run," she said with a chuckle.
Rusty's legacy will carry on in our hearts and minds and memories.
And in all the great jazz that will still be played around the world by musicians who were encouraged and inspired by Rusty.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 12, 2008

Denny Schaffer's 'sermon'

Went to see Denny Schaffer speak at a banquet last night. He was a local radio star in the 1990s, dominating the airwaves with his shock-jock "Breakfast Club" program on KISS-FM.

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Denny moved to Atlanta, had a great gig going, then the station dropped all its deejays and went with an automated format. He's now running an internet show called dennyradio.com and runs a morning slot from Atlanta that is broadcast weekdays on WCWA-AM in Toledo.
He spoke for an hour last night about his faith in Jesus and how it helped him deal with the ups and downs of the radio business. It was a heartfelt talk about the important things in life and how focusing on God will carry you through the good times and the bad.
Denny was a wildman for years but had a life-changing spiritual experience in 1999 and although it's an ongoing process and, as for anyone, sometimes a real struggle, anyone who heard him speak last night knows he is genuinely a believer.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 12, 2008

October 13, 2008

Robinson's status

I made a routine check of Father Gerald Robinson's status with the Ohio Department of Corrections.
Yes, he's still incarcerated at the Hocking Correctional Facility in Nelsonville, Ohio.

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Gerald Robinson's prison file photo. .

Maybe this item has been on the web page before but I just noticed that the "maximum sentence expiration date" is listed as 01/01/8888.
That's year 8888, as in 6,880 years from now.
I suppose the corrections bureau is making sure that with potential medical advancements in the next few years the offender doesn't outlive his life sentence.
The first possible parole hearing for Robinson, who turned 70 last April, is in March 2021.

Here's a link to the site if you're interested.
* * *
In a totally unrelated note, Democratic presidential candidate Barack is camped out in the Toledo area this week preparing for the debate on Wednesday night.
* * *
Toledo, Ohio
Oct. 13, 2008

Grouchy old Beatle

This would be funny if it weren't so sad... Here's a guy who is living the good life because he happened to hook up with three of the greatest musical talents in rock history -- certainly not because of his adequate but unremarkable drumming skills.
You'd think he'd be grateful that people are still asking for his autograph -- and buying his music and paying to see him in concert. But nooooo... Ringo is quite put out by the burden of being asked to sign things.
Maybe the stock market is ruining his mood. But a friend of mine who writes about music for a living told me a few years ago that Ringo was turning into "a grouchy old man."
This Reuters story that was published today is proof my friend was right:
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Former Beatles drummer Ringo Starr has told fans to stop sending letters and requests for autographs, saying mail will be thrown away after October 20 because he has too much to do.

Starr, 68, made the announcement in a video message titled "Sorry, No More Signing Stuff" posted on his official web site www.ringostarr.com.
Wearing sunglasses and flashing a peace sign, he says;

"I want to tell you after the 20th of October please do not send fan mail to any address you have. Nothing will be signed after the 20th of October. If that is the date on the envelope, it's gonna be tossed.

"I'm warning you with peace and love I have too much to do. So no more fan mail. Thank you, thank you. And no objects to be signed. Nothing."

He said; "This is a serious message to everybody watching my update right now. Peace and love. Peace and love."

Starr, who with fellow Beatles Paul McCartney and the late John Lennon and George Harrison, comes from Liverpool, England now has homes in Los Angeles and France.

Starr has released more than 12 albums since The Beatles broke up in 1970, the most recent of which was "Liverpool 8" in January 2008.

October 14, 2008

Mob school & warfare

Did you see "60 Minutes" last Sunday? There were two great segments -- one on Jack Garcia, a 450-pound Cuban-American who infiltrated the mob for the FBI. The most amusing thing is that he spent a lot of time in "mob school" watching the Food Channel because food is such an important part of the mafia life. He needed to know how to pronounce all the spices and entrees correctly.
I also thought it was an interesting little tidbit that all mobsters carry their cash in a wad that has to be wrapped with a purple rubber band taken off a stalk of broccoli from the grocery store. If you don't carry your cash like that, the mobsters will know you're a poser, according to Garcia (aka Jack Falcone).
Be careful if you're dealing with someone who reaches into their pocket and pulls out a bankroll wrapped with a purple rubber band...
Garcia ended his undercover gig when one mobster attacked someone in the housewares department of a department store, cracking his head open with a crystal candlestick. Garcia/Falcone didn't follow mafia protocol and join in on the beating, so his FBI bosses figured he'd be suspect and ended the sting, which led to dozens of arrests of high-profile mobsters.
Garcia said he realizes he's a target now but said he's the good guy and he's not going to go into hiding. And if they come after him, "they'd better be ready," he said.
Here is a link to CBS' 60 Minutes site.
Falcone wrote a book about the operation, published yesterday. Here's a link to the Amazon site.

The other fascinating episode was about the war in Iraq. The battle for Sadr City was not won by a surge of American troops but by the use of high-tech weapons that are simply amazing.
The Army has drone planes that fly stealthily above the city at 12,000 feet.
When insurgents fired a rocket, it zeroed in on them and started tracking them. Rather than attack right away, the Army kept watching them for 8 to 12 hours until they rendezvoused for a group debriefing.
Then the Army would call in another rocket-equipped drone that would fire a missile at the building where everyone was meeting. Instead of taking out one or two of the militiamen, the attack would take out dozens.
By doing this, along with putting up a concrete barrier to keep the insurgents out of mortar range of the Green Zone, attacks against U.S. troops dropped from 60 a day to 2 or 3.
That's the way to win a war in the 21st century.
Here's a link to that segment.
* * *
Saw on the news yesterday that there's 100 days left for President Bush's administration. Change is coming soon, one way or another.
* * *
I'm still stunned that University of Toledo beat the University of Michigan Wolverines 13-10 on Saturday at the Big House. Michigan has never been so humbled. It was the first time U of M lost to a MAC team and they lost at home to a UT team that was in the throes of a disastrous year.
We all knew it would be a rough season with the new head coach and a freshman QB, but I personally never thought the mighty Wolverines would be toothless and cowering in the corner with their tails between their legs.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 14, 2008

October 15, 2008

Odds & Ends

Interviewed John Tesh last week, he's a realy nice guy and I enjoy our conversations. One thing he said that didn't fit it into the article I'm writing, which runs tomorrow, is about his recent meetings with radio show sponsors.

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Most companies were wary of signing up for 2009, he said, given the state of the economy. But he has one sponsor whose business is booming: Kraft Foods. And you know why? Because of their famous and famously cheap macaroni & cheese. When the economy falters, people still need to eat. And when they cut their food budgets, they buy more mac & cheese.
Tesh is playing in Toledo next Wednesday at the Stranahan Theater.
* * *
I read an AP article yesterday about a 19-year-old girl in Asheville, N.C., who legally changed her name from Jennifer Thornburg to (drumroll please) CutoutDissection.com.
She's protesting animal dissections in school.
It's not enough to hold a sit-in or a rally, I suppose.
I wonder if she'll ever find her new name on a keychain in a souvenir shop?
* * *
Off to sit in a sukkah -- for a story about the Jewish holiday of Sukkot. A local family bought theirs on www.sukkah.com. Isn't the internet wonderful?
Tonight, I'm covering a local speech by the Rev. Al Sharpton, who is rolling through the swing states to get out the vote. Should be fun.
* * *
Reading Cathleen Falsani's new book, Sin Boldly (the title is from a sermon by Martin Luther). It's really a collection of essays on faith, written by the esteemed religion reporter for the Chicago Sun-Times.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 15, 2008

October 17, 2008

Al Sharpton's Toledo visit

I went to a central city church to cover a talk Wednesday night by the Rev. Al Sharpton, the noted civil rights leader from New York City.
My editor was under the impression Sharpton was going to talk about politics. But on Wednesday night, he was there to preach the Gospel. His politicking was to take place on Thursday, he told me afterward, and he came to Toledo a day earlier because he was invited to preach at the Worship Center in Toledo's Old West End neighborhood.
You always hear about Sharpton's civil rights activities but he is an amazing preacher. The 54-year-old Baptist minister spoke about how God uses unlikely people to do his work, including Moses and Abraham. Rather than pick the perfect "big shots," he picks the less likely people because that way they know it was God's power and not human ability.
At times, Sharpton was shouting and dancing and the organist, Chris Byrd, was accenting each sermon line with a burst from the keyboards. The crowd was shouting and waving their hands and dancing around at times.
It was a powerful service and the music that preceded the sermon really rocked the house. What made it even more interesting was that the church is the former First Unitarian Church of Toledo, which could not be more different in style and substance than the church that has moved into its former building.
Here's the article I wrote.
* * *
A funny side note: I asked the local church leaders for a few minutes with Al Sharpton after the service, feeling that I had to get something political for the article. They told me the preacher needed to change his clothes and then afterward he would meet with the media. (I had seen a TV crew earlier but I think they were gone by then.)
I pressed them because I was on a tight deadline, and Sharpton graciously agreed to talk right away after the service. I was invited back into the pastor's office, where I interviewed him through an open door to the closet, sight unseen, while he was changing his clothes.
It was a bit awkward but at least he was willing to accommodate me. And when he was finished he came out and we spoke for a few minutes eye to eye.
In my 30-plus years in journalism, that was the first time I've ever interviewed someone through a closet door.
* * *
I had been looking forward to seeing Gore Vidal speak last night in the Authors! Authors! lecture series in Toledo. But it was canceled due to an unexplained injury to Vidal, who is 83 years old now. He is a great writer and quite controversial at times, and I'm sure his talk would have been entertaining.
I hope he's OK and that he reschedules his Toledo talk.
UPDATE: Gore fell at his home; no Toledo visit has been rescheduled.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 17, 2008

Simpson theology

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Here are a few notable quotes on religion from that great theologian, Homer Simpson, which I found while cleaning out a file cabinet:

I'm normally not a praying man, but if you're up there, please save me Superman!

I'm not a bad guy! I work hard, and I love my kids. So why should I spend half my Sunday hearing about how I'm going to hell?

Dear Lord, the gods have been good to me and for the first time in my life, everything is absolutely perfect just the way it is. So here’s the deal: you freeze everything as it is, and I won’t ask for anything more. If that is OK, please give me absolutely no sign. [no response] OK, deal. In gratitude, I present you this offering of cookies and milk. If you want me to eat them for you, please give me no sign. [no response] Thy will be done.

But Marge, what if we chose the wrong religion? Each week we just make God madder and madder.

Dear God of England, please get me out of this. If you do, I promise to spell the word 'color' with a U, and use the metric system with every cubic milliliter of blood in my... oh, I can't do it! It's so stupid!

Don't worry, son. I'm sure he's up in heaven right now, laughing it up with all the other celebrities. John Dillinger. Ty Cobb. Joseph Stalin. (sighing) I wish I were dead.

Homer: Your mother had this crazy idea that gambling is wrong. Even though they say it's okay in the Bible.
Lisa: Really? Where?
Homer: Eh, somewhere in the back.

The lesson is: Our God is vengeful! O spiteful one, show me who to smite and they shall be smoten.

And one from neighbor Ned Flanders: Bless the grocer for this wonderful meat, the middlemen who jacked up the price, and let's not forget the humane but determined guys over at the slaughterhouse.

* * *
Toledo, Ohio
Oct. 17, 2008

October 18, 2008

New Toledo celebrity

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Toledo has produced a handful of internationally known stars, First there was Teresa Brewer and her song "Nickelodeon," then Danny Thomas of "Make Room for Daddy" TV fame, then Jamie Farr with "M*A*S*H," and topping them all is Katie Holmes of "Dawson's Creek" and Hollywood fame and her hubby Tom Cruise and their daughter Suri.
But now ... the newest blazing star from Toledo is ... Joe the Plumber.
His real name is Joe Wurzelbacher, and he's actually from the Toledo suburb of Holland, Ohio. But he was mentioned 23 times in the presidential debate Wednesday night and has appeared on TV and in newspapers worldwide.
It all started with his complaint to Sen. Barack Obama about having to pay higher taxes if you earn more than $250,000 a year.
That quote was picked up by my colleague Tom Troy who quoted Joe in the paper, which led John McCain to jump on it as an example of his tax policies, and suddenly there was a media firestorm swirling around Joe the Plumber.
You can even buy Joe the Plumber T-shirts at Cafe Press now.
In the New York Times photo above, Joe, at right, is speaking to Toledo Blade reporter Tom Troy and photographer Amy Voigt, and Associated Press reporter John Seewer. The photo ran at the top of the New York Times' front page yesterday.

Today I'm feeling sorry for Mr. Wurzelbacher.
He didn't ask for the attention and now he is the brunt of cruel jokes by late-night comedians, and his dirty laundry is national news. It turns out he's not a licensed plumber, he owes back taxes, and there are liens on his house.
No wonder Joe has issues with tax rates, he's already mired in tax trouble.
As far as earning more than $250,000 a year, he's a long way from that salary, he's said on TV. This whole political frenzy over Joe the Plumber's worries about hitting a higher tax bracket are pretty crazy because really, it's all just a pipe dream for the plumber, so to speak.
* * *
Twenty eight years ago today, Janet and I were married in a small Catholic Church in Tampa, Florida.
We are spending our 28th anniversary at Pokagon Park in Indiana, one of our favorite places and where the autumn leaves are at their peak right now.
I am grateful to God for bringing Janet and me together in the first place, and for being with us each and every step of the way through the years.
* * *
Oct. 18, 2008
Sylvania, Ohio

October 20, 2008

Autumn in Indiana

My wife, Janet, and I celebrated our 28th wedding anniversary on Saturday. We had made some plans that fell through and we ended up with the best day ever -- going to Pokagon State Park in Angola, Indiana, about 80 miles west of Toledo just over the Ohio state line.
We hiked the trails for narly four hours on a perfect fall day, leaves about at their peak colors, and then had dinner at the Potawatami Inn.
Janet and I spent our honeymoon in the mountains of North Carolina, hiking a lot of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, and we've been fans of, and frequent visitors to, Pokagon ever since we moved to Toledo 27 years ago.
So it seemed especially fitting to spend our anniversary in the midst of autumn splendor in one of our favorite parks within easy driving distance.
So even though our other, "first" plans for our anniversary fell through, we agreed after all was said and done that this was God's first plan for us to spend our day together.
He knows us pretty well by now.

Here are a few photos I took (some using a timer) as we walked through one of our favorite parks on a glorious autumn day. Hope you enjoy them.
-- David

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* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 19, 2008


October 21, 2008

Joel Osteen, Gore Vidal, and iZippo

I have been reading Become a Better You by the Rev. Joel Osteen, best-selling author and pastor of Lakewood Church in Houston.
He and his wife, Victoria, will be in Detroit Friday (here's a little story I wrote about it) and I've arranged to interview the couple, whose church is the largest in the United States, with 43,500 average weekend attendance.

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So far, Become a Better You has been a fairly interesting read but there's no big revelations, just lots of positive words and pats on the back for people to rise above their circumstances and not settle for a life of mediocrity, drudgery, or unhappiness.
The fact that it is a best-seller (as was his previous book, Your Best Life Now) is proof that people are not getting enough of that message elsewhere.
Too many people are getting beaten down, discouraged, worn out, tired, and depressed. They're giving up and looking at life as a grind. That's sad. Every day should be an adventure and a time to count one's blessings and enjoy life and the world around us.
The world is desperate for positivity and Joel Osteen gives it to them in mega-doses.
I'm looking forward to interviewing him and Victoria and hope it all works out.
* * *
At the opposite extreme, we have Gore Vidal, the 83-year-old author who was supposed to speak in Toledo last week but canceled due to an injury. He fell at home and was unable to travel.
I mentioned to Tahree Lane that I was disappointed at the cancellation. Tahree has interviewed dozens and dozens of authors and said Vidal was extremely nasty and denigrating to her. He insulted her numerous times, regarded himself as a high and mighty, world-renowned writer for whom doing an interview was beneath him, and generally treated this kind and competent reporter like dirt.
After hearing about Vidal's attitude, now I'm glad he didn't make it to Toledo.
* * *
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Remember going to concerts where audiences lighted matches or lighters during the ballads and lifted them high, illuminating the room? That was almost always a concert highlight.
But now, with the no-smoking policies (for which I am thankful), fans have been raising cell phones in the air in place of matches.
It doesn't have the same impact, obviously.
Coming to the rescue to fill this gaping hole in modern society are Zippo lighters and a software company called Moderati.
You can download an app to your iPhone that creates an image of a Zippo lighter (you can pick the design or customize it). With the flick of a finger, you "open" the Zippo and crank it, and a flame appears that looks like the real thing.
So now when you heard Skynyrd play "Free Bird" or McCartney sings "Yesterday," you can hold your iPhone up, flick your Zippo, and bring back the old days. In a virtual way.
Modern technology at its best, don't you think?
Here's a link to a demonstration of the virtual Zippo.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 21, 2008

October 22, 2008

Go Rays!

Tonight is the opening game of the World Series with the cinderella team of the Tampa Bay Rays taking on the Philadelphia Phillies.
Having lived in Tampa for 11 years, and with relatives living there now, and having gone to lots of Rays games when the team was pathetic, I'm really hoping they can win it all this year.
They do have the talent now, thanks to lowly finishes giving them high draft picks every year. And they showed some character by hanging on to beat the mighty Red Sox, so it's not like they've been lucky all the way.
This could be their year.
As I've noted before in this column, this is the first season the team is not officially called the Tampa Bay Devil Rays. So once the devil was exorcised, the team achieved greatness. Coincidence? I think not!
The only obstacle for me watching the series is that I've got something going on almost every night for the next week or so.
Tonight we're going to see John Tesh in concert. He's one of my favorite people to interview and I love his radio show, but I've never seen him in concert before. He is just two years older than me, grew up on Long Island like I did, and went to N.C. State when I was a student at Duke. He played lacrosse while I covered lacrosse for the Duke Chronicle (long before the infamous Duke lacrosse team scandal of 2006). I might even have mentioned him in a sports article.
I'm looking forward to the concert tonight and if all goes well, we'll be home in time to see the Rays win Game 1.
* * *
Yesterday I interviewed Tom Klein, a retired BGSU professor who is active in local interfaith efforts and will be teaching a class on that topic for the public starting Oct. 27.
Tom is a pretty amazing person whose interests in interfaith projects began when he signed up to teach at Semester at Sea, circling the globe and teaching literature to students as they visited different countries. The trip exposed Tom to world religions in a new way and inspired him to build bridges between faiths instead of letting the walls keep everyone apart.
Tom surprised me yesterday by saying that as of January, he will be teaching in Thailand, signing on indefinitely. He has been drawn to Buddhist culture and tradition and feels this is where he should be.
He also extended an invitation to visit, which I would love to do someday.
* * *
I'm considering a trip to Albania in February. My church is sending a short-term mission team there. But it's a month before my daughter's wedding and I just don't know if it'll work out for a number of reasons.
Albania is an intriguing country, extremely poor and once closed to western civilization. The people really could use some help and that's why our church is going.
* * *
I'm still reading Joel Osteen's Become a Better You, because I'm interviewing him on Friday, but also juggling a couple of other books.
One of them, whose author will not be named here, kept making me feel annoyed every time I read a few chapters.
I couldn't understand why at first, but it finally dawned on me: the writing comes across with an attitude and I'm pretty sure the author doesn't even realize it.
She writes as if she is dropping pearls of wisdom before her loyal readers. But the pearls aren't very big and the wisdom isn't very deep.
It must be hard to write a book while looking down your nose the whole time.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
October 22, 2008

October 23, 2008

Inspired and intelligent

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I've been reading Joel Osteen's "Become a Better You" (background for an article I'm writing), and listening to John Tesh's music and his radio show, "Intelligence for Your Life."
All I need now is a Norman Vincent Peale book, a Dr. Phil show, and a Yanni album and I'd probably try to run for president of the world.
Tesh and Osteen know how to motivate people and give people a positive outlook on life.
I'm an optimistic person by nature, although like anyone I have my down moments, but I can see how Tesh's and Osteen's words of encouragement and Tesh's uplifting music can help raise the spirits of people who lean toward gloom and doom.
Sometimes I forget how easy it is to look at the glass as half empty instead of half full, and to start feeling sorry for yourself and sink into depression, insecurity and even despair.
* * *
I did get home in time to watch the World Series from the 7th inning on (I used my phone to check the score during the Tesh concert). The Rays lost but it was a close one, 3-2. Once Brad Lidge gets on the mound for the Phillies these days, there's basically no hope for hitters. The guy's slider has been unhittable this year. The best thing the Rays can do is try to avoid close games so they don't have to face Lidge with the game on the line.
* * *
Getting back to John Tesh's concert in Toledo, I was amazed that he and his band played a number of very Christian songs, including "Yes, Lord!," "Draw Me Close To You," and "I Can Only Imagine."
John also told the Stranahan Theater audience -- a jammed house, probably 1,800 people -- about the need to get out of the house and help others, do some mission work or find a ministry.
My wife Janet and I got to chat with John at intermission, and he said he never has gotten a complaint about being too religious in concert. I've interviewed him a number of times by phone so it was nice to finally meet him in person. He joked that when he sings "Draw Me Close To You" he doesn't look at his female singer, Chelsea Ward, or it might give the wrong impression.
I enjoyed the concert a lot, partly for the music and partly for Tesh's engaging showmanship.
There never was a dull moment with Tesh telling funny stories and offering conversational chats in between songs. He's a decent musician but probably better at composing and organizing and being a team leader. His keyboards and vocals were backed by a superbly talented band, amusing hip-hop dancing by Breeze Lee, and first-rate visuals with strobe and robotic lights, digital screen imagery, smoke machines and the like.

Here are a few photos I took at last night's show at the Stranahan Theater:

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* * *
Sylvania, Oho
October 23, 2008


October 25, 2008

Mosque, Elections, Osteens

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On Thursday, I left the office and went to a program about interfaith relations held at the University of Toledo. A documentary film, "Talking Through Walls" was shown that details how people from diverse religious groups banded together to help Muslims in a Philadelphia suburb get a mosque built despite initial opposition from neighbors.
I left before the panel discussion to go to a private home in the Toledo suburb of Perrysburg where about 25 people had gathered, by invitation, to pray for our country and the upcoming election. It was an interesting and earnest group of people who are very concerned about the future of America.
Yesterday, I left early in the morning for the Detroit suburb of Utica, where I had an interview set up with Joel and Victoria Osteen, pastors of Lakewood Church in Houston. We met in the back room of the Borders bookstore before Victoria's noon book signing.
I think these two people are genuine and by the way their ministry has grown they obviously have a special touch from God. I enjoyed sitting down with them and doing the interview and they were as courteous, humble and sincere as any ministers I've ever met.

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Yet their church has grown from 6,000 in 1999 to 43,500 today, in the nine years since Joel succeeded his father, John, after the senior Osteen's death of a heart attack. Plus Joel's television ministry reaches millions of people around the world and his books are NY Times bestsellers. Victoria's new book, "Love Your Life," was published Oct. 14 and is No. 2 on the NY Times list.
After the interview, we stuck around for the book signing and I interviewed people who waited in line, including one guy who drove 300 miles from Lagrange, Ind., just to meet the Osteens.
* * *
We were out of the bookstore by 1:30 or so, and the event at the Palace of Auburn Hills didn't start until 7:30 p.m.
There's no way I would've driven 90 miles back to Toledo and then made the return trip to Auburn Hills for the evening program, but my friend Ken, who works as a consultant in the automotive industry, took me for a personal tour of the Warren Truck Assembly Plant in suburban Detroit. They manufacture Dodge Dakotas and Ram pickup trucks at the rate of one per minute, and Ken knows the plant inside and out so it was a fascinating firsthand tour. Unfortunately I couldn't take any photos.
* * *
We then headed back to the Palace for "A Night of Hope". I have to say my impression of the Osteens is that they are the real deal -- the same people and personalities backstage as you see onstage. At one point in his sermon last night, Joel forgot the next point he was going to make and paused, saying he had to check his notes. I thought it was funny when he said, "You never see me do this on television because I edit it out."
He also joked that when you pray for those who attack you should say, "Lord blast them ... I mean, Lord bless them..."
Before the concert, I met a woman sitting near me who said she lost her husband in a motorcycle accident a year ago. He had run a few businesses and they lived comfortably but when he died he left the family nothing, no insurance and no way to profit from the businesses. She has three teenage children and her life has been turned upside down. She also said she didn't really consider herself a Christian.
In his sermon, Osteen made several references to people who lost loved ones or spouses, and how God has something new in store for them. He said a few other things that seemed to be aimed directly at this woman. At the end of the sermon, he gave a prayer of salvation and this woman stood up... and I looked around and I would guess that 40 percent of the people at the Palace also stood up -- somewhere between 4,000 and 6,000 is my guesstimate.
I never had strong feelings one way or another about the Osteens before yesterday, but now after a day's immersion in their ministry I believe they really have something special going on. Talking to them and to their followers, people are in need of encouragement and that's exactly what their message is. It seems simple but it obviously is having an impact.
Here's a link to their website.

wpalace.jpg

* * *
At a radically different part of the ministry spectrum from the Osteens is Bob Larson, aka The Real Exorcist. I thought the article I wrote about him, published today, came out well. Here's a link to it if you're interested.

* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
October 25, 2008

October 27, 2008

No news on Robinson

Several people have called and emailed me recently asking if there have been any developments in Fr. Gerald Robinson's legal situation.
The short answer is No.
The civil suit by Survivor Doe against Robinson is still working its way through Common Pleas Court, with a trial date set for May 9, 2009. No big developments there.
The appeals court upheld his conviction and his attorneys plan to appeal to the Ohio Supreme Court.
The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction still lists him as incarcerated, so Fr. Robinson will be spending his third straight Halloween in prison.
I wonder if the inmates are allowed to observe this holiday of dubious spiritual origins, and if so, what do they dress up as?
* * *
I was walking downtown the other day and saw a guy peering into a garbage can. People often do that to remove recyclable items like pop cans or glass bottles. I saw the man lean in, pick up an open quart-sized beer bottle, hold it up to the light to inspect it, sniff the opening, then quaff a few ounces of (presumably) beer.
Yuck.
What should we think when someone does such a thing? Times are not that tough, are they?
* * *
Here's a short but bizarre news story from the Associated Press, published last Friday, that brings to a point all the talk about frivolous lawsuits, people feeling that society owes them something, about greed and corruption, and self-absorption and deception... It's all here in just a few paragraphs:

Man who sought to sue for lost pants tries again

WASHINGTON - A former administrative law judge who unsuccessfully sued a dry cleaner for $54 million over a pair of lost pants tried to convince an appeals panel yesterday that he deserves the money because he is a fraud victim.

Roy L. Pearson argued before the District of Columbia Court of Appeals that the case is about whether the owners of a neighborhood business misled consumers with a sign that claimed "Satisfaction Guaranteed."

Mr. Pearson said the sign was deceptive and that the burden was on owners Jin Nam Chung and Soo Chung to explain whether the promise came with restrictions.

He lost his job when a D.C. commission voted not to reappoint him.
* * *
This reminds me of a joke by one of my favorite comedians, the late, great Mitch Hedberg:

I was walking by a dry cleaner at 3 a.m., and it said "Sorry, we're closed." You don't have to be sorry. It's 3 a.m., and you're a dry cleaner. It would be ridiculous for me to expect you to be open. I'm not gonna walk by at ten and say, "Hey, I walked by at three, you guys were closed. Someone owes me an apology. This jacket would be halfway done!"

* * *
Extreme religious intolerance reared its ugly head again when a a 34-year-old Christian aid worker from Great Britain was shot and killed by the Taliban in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Oct. 20.
A Taliban spokesman, Zabiullah Mujahid, claimed responsibility for the Taliban attack on Gayle Williams.
"We killed her for spreading Christian propaganda. This woman came to Afghanistan to teach Christianity to the people of Afghanistan. Our [leaders] issued a decree to kill this woman," Mujahid told the Associated Press.
This kind of fanaticism should never be tolerated. World leaders must not only condemn the attack but take action against the Taliban and any regime that would allow such brutality.
We need to learn to live together despite our differences.
* * *
I watched a documentary with some friends over the weekend called "Finger of God." Very interesting film, starting with an investigation of people whose teeth were turned into solid gold at a revival in Toronto.
When the documentarian went there, he also found a pastor who has gold dust appear on his head and shoulders while he preaches; people who have had gold dust materialize in their Bibles, and in one episode he even filmed a pile of gold dust appearing on the pants of a man who had fallen down after prayer ("slain the spirit," as the saying goes).
Oddly, the gold dust appeared right beside the man's pants zipper, which the minister took as a sign of fertility... even though the guy looked to be in his 70s. Definitely strange.
One man, a Lutheran, showed the cameraman a handful of manna that had materialized in the pages of his Bible. It happens all the time, he said, and people who eat the manna have been cured of illnesses and diseases.
From there, the filmmaker traveled the world checking out modern-day miracles. It was an amazing journey, including visits to Mozambique, Africa, where he was told that more than 80 people have been raised from the dead over the last 10 years.
In China, he interviewed pastors of the underground Christian church. They have prayer meetings every day at 4:30 a.m. until they have to leave for work, and on Saturdays they meet for prayer from 8 a.m. until 8 p.m.!
An American minister who's been there for 40 years said the more the government tries to suppress the Christian church, the more it thrives.
We are spoiled and lazy in America, no doubt about it.
One of the most touching moments, for me, was when Heidi Baker, an American minister with a PhD in theology, went to pray for a Gypsy Muslim woman's eyes in Turkey. The Gypsies are the lowest of the low on Turkey's social ladder, and Baker just went up to her to pray. Her translator was a Turkish Christian minister who kept trying to get the woman to accept Jesus. The woman kept saying Mohammed and Allah healed her. Heidi Baker told the minister to let her be, just show the woman love and don't worry about proselytizing. The minister kept politely disagreeing but finally gave in.
Baker's way of showing love without attaching any strings is the real deal. I hope the minister learned a lesson from that dispute.
You can find out more about this film here.
* * *
My daughter had a friend from Australia stay with us last week. I was thinking that in the last few years we've had young people from Australia, Norway, Samoa, New Zealand, Fiji, and Uganda stay at our house.
I'll never forget standing in our kitchen and holding hands in a circle as one of the men prayed for us in Fijian. I didn't understand a word he said but it sure sounded heavenly.
I always enjoy providing a place for these international visitors, and it always seems like we're the ones who get blessed.
* * *
Sarah Palin's coming to the area on Wednesday. I've tried to put in a request for an interview with her about God and faith. It doesn't seem likely, but it doesn't hurt to ask. What a great story that would be.
* * *
Tampa Bay Rays are on the ropes against the Phillies. Game 5 is tonight and they're down 3-1. I'm still hoping they can pull it off. It was a rough weekend for my sports teams. Michigan got trounced by Michigan State, no surprise there. Ohio State, which I don't like but don't hate, also lost, to Penn State, so their season is going downhill fast. And the Unviersity of Toledo lost to Central Michigan, 24-23, and Tampa Bay Bucs lost to the Dallas Cowboys.
The only one of the teams I like that was victorious was Duke, who beat Vandy 10-7, to go 4-3 for the season -- a big year so far for Duke football.

* * *
Toledo, Ohio
Oct. 27, 2008

October 28, 2008

Demons and Robinson

Got a call from Father Jeffrey Grob yesterday. He's the Catholic priest from Chicago who testified in the Gerald Robinson trial on the occult aspects of Sister Margaret Ann Pahl's murder. He was the assistant to the exorcist of the archdiocese at the time of the trial in 2006.
I had called Father Grob a week earlier for an article I was working on about Bob Larson, the minister who will be starring in a reality TV show called The Real Exorcist. Father Grob returned my call too late to be included in the article but we had a good conversation nonetheless.
I asked him if he got any negative comments for testifying against Father Robinson, and he said no, quite the contrary. Many people, including priests, commended him for telling the truth about some of the horrible things that had been going on with Robinson. They were glad he exposed the occult crimes for what they were, instead of letting them be covered up.
He also said he read "Sin, Shame & Secrets" and felt that it was very well written. He liked the Bob Larson article as well, calling it "a very good read."
Father Grob said he and Bob Larson "come from very different traditions" and that while he does not think exorcisms are suitable for reality TV, he supports Larson's idea that the program may help people by showing that demon possession is real.
By the way, got a complaint letter from someone blasting the Larson article, saying I should've included comments from "mainline" ministers. I pointed out that Rev. Roger Miller, who is quoted in the article, is from the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. I think that qualifies.
Sometimes people get mad at me because articles don't say what they want them to say.
I never mind getting criticized by a reader who has a reasonable argument or points out a legitimate error.
What I find tiresome, though, is when people attack me because they have such strong emotions on a particular subject that they can't see straight, and they are irate because I am not promoting their agenda.
* * *
Watched the World Series last night... the Rays couldn't get a break, every close pitch was a ball for Tampa Bay's Scott Kazmir and a strike for the Phillies' Cole Hamels. Replays showed several really poor calls by the home plate umpire.
The weather was absolutely horrible and the Rays were down 2-1, playing in rain and 39-degree temperatures, at the halfway mark, so it would have been an official game if the umps called it on account of weather. That would have been the end of the series and the Phils would've won.
Thankfully for all concerned, the Rays scored a run in the top of the 6th, tying it up 2-2. The game was quickly suspended and the teams wi'll resume where they left off. That tie really took the pressure off the umps and MLB officials.
It would have been a tough way to lose the series if the game was called before 9 innings.
Tampa Bay still faces tremendous odds but at least they survived another day.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
October 28, 2008

October 29, 2008

Church settlement

A lawsuit filed by members of a closed parish, St. Joseph Catholic Church in Salem, Ohio, has been settled by mediation.
The ex-parishioners formed a nonprofit organization called St. Joseph Salem Heritage Society that will be able to use their old church and property but with restrictions. They will need to get permission of the pastor of another local, active parish if they want to hold any sacramental services.
The suit had been filed in Wyandot County Common Pleas Court.
* * *
I spent all of last night at a church board meeting. It's a tricky time trying to plan 2009 budgets when the economy is falling apart right before our very eyes. Do you step forward in faith and trust God to provide, or do you use (biblical) wisdom and scale things back, anticipating a down year?
I think I've spent too much time reading and writing about Joel Osteen lately. He really believes you can talk yourself into a down year, or you have a good year by thinking positively.
Our church came up with a great plan, I think, where we keep the '09 budget the same as '08 but with some discretionary budget items that can go unspent if the money's not there. A wise compromise, in my opinion.
* * *
We watched a video of Craig Groeschel from LifeChurch.tv that he gave at Willow Creek's Leadership Summit in August. I watched it live in August but truly enjoyed it the second time around.
Groeschel is a gifted speaker, speaking spiritual truths and saying them in a contemporary and entertaining way. He's got a great sense of humor and oddly enough looks a lot like Tom Cruise when he smiles.
Put that all together and it's no wonder his church is growing rapidly, and also in innovative ways. He preaches in Oklahoma and his message is broadcast live via satellite to about a dozen churches across the country. LifeChurch.tv gets more than 23,000 people at their weekend services even though the largest facility they have seats 1,700 people.
He's spoke about a new book he's written, which I have yet to read but would like to, called "IT: How Churches and Leaders Can Get IT and Keep IT."
He ended his talk by quoting a Franciscan benediction that was so profound and beautiful I just have to share it with you:

"May God bless you with discomfort at easy answers, half truths, and superficial relationships so that you may live deep within your heart.
May God bless you with an anger at injustice, oppression, and exploitation of people, so that you may work for justice, freedom, and peace.
May God bless you with tears to shed for those who suffer from pain, rejection, starvation, and war, so that you may reach out your hand to comfort them and to turn their pain into joy.
And may God bless you with enough foolishness to believe that you can make a difference in this world, so that you can do what others claim cannot be done."

* * *
Sarah Palin is in Bowling Green this morning. I would have gone if I didn't have so much work to do. Too bad work gets in the way of so many things ;-)
I put in a request for an interview with the GOPVP candidate to talk about faith, to no avail. It doesn't hurt to ask, though.
"You have not because you ask not." (James 4:2)
Sylvania, Ohio
October 29, 2008


October 30, 2008

Weird World Series

The Phillies finished off the Rays last night, probably the merciful thing to do. Was anyone watching? I'll bet the ratings for this series was one of the lowest ever. I was hoping Tampa Bay could be the Cinderella story but when they get blown out 3 1/2 games to 1, or was it 4 to 1? just kidding... who tuned in for the death blow?
The suspended game threw everything into disarray and when the Yankees, Red Sox or Dodgers aren't in it, the ratings plummet.
I'm glad that if the Rays lost, they lost to a good team. The Phils played great ball and haven't won it all since 1980.
Closer Brad Lidge was simply amazing. His slider dives like a smart bomb. No wonder he had a perfect year, never blowing a save the whole season.
When it was over, Lidge fell to his knees and as his team raced toward him, I read his lips and it looked like he shouted "Praise the Lord".
When they interviewed him afterward, he thanked his teammates and his Lord and Savior Jesus Christ and went on to describe how great it was to win the Series. He did a great job of making it clear he's a Christian and then talking about baseball player instead of looking like a one-trick evangelist.
* * *
I went to see an early showing of "The Secret Life of Bees" yesterday... pretty good movie. The director really tugs on your heartstrings, which was a bit overbearing for me, and I'm not a big fan of Queen Latifah who always seems to be herself and can't sink into a role.
But Dakota Fanning was fantastic as the feisty hard-luck teen and the setting -- South Carolina in 1964 -- provided the emotionally charged backdrop of ugly racism resisting the dawn of the new civil rights era.
* * *
Tonight, Elie Wiesel will be speaking at the University of Toledo. Nobel Peace Prize winner and Holocaust survivor, Wiesel has written more than 50 books. He's an inspiration to me and I'm looking forward to his lecture.
* * *
Also tonight, the reality TV shw "The Real Exorcist," starring Bob Larson, will debut from 7 to 11 p.m. on the Sci Fi channel. I set my TiVo.
* * *
Sylvania, Ohio
Oct. 30, 2008

About October 2008

This page contains all entries posted to Keywords by David Yonke in October 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

September 2008 is the previous archive.

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