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Time Editor to Obama: Don’t Go to Church! It’s a ‘Piety Trap’!

Time executive editor Nancy Gibbs, the writer of many ridiculously gooey leg-thrill sentences about Democratic politicians, is now begging President Obama to avoid going to church — it’s “The Piety Trap.” Her headline continues: “Sure, we want to know what a president believes in…but that doesn’t always mean he should tell us.” Obama is much more likely to end up in a sand trap than a piety trap on Sundays, but Gibbs doesn’t want him to go to church anyway: Many a pundit has predicted that we are sure to see the Obamas attending some nice, safe church one day soon, the girls in their Sunday best, Obama with a big Bill Clinton Bible under his arm or explaining what Glenn Beck calls Obama’s “version of Christianity.” I devoutly hope the President resists this advice or, if  he feels the call to worship, that he finds a way to do it that meets his private needs rather than his political ones. This is a funny passage coming from Gibbs, who found some poetic equivalence two years ago between the birth of Jesus Christ and the birth of hopes for Obama after the election: “Some princes are born in palaces. Some are born in mangers. But a few are born in the imagination, out of scraps of history and hope.” It won our “Obamagasm Award” as the gushiest pro-Obama quote of the election year.   Sentences like this should be kept in mind when Time’s top editor Rick Stengel declares “No one personifies TIME more than Nancy Gibbs…As a journalist, Nancy is timely and timeless.”   Gibbs also won our “Carve Clinton Into Mount Rushmore Award” in 1998 for her infamous “naked in a sharp dark suit” tribute to Bill Clinton:  He invited his exhausted audience to take a holiday from Lewinsky and spend a refreshing hour and 12 minutes feeling like a country again. For once the talk on the screen was not of oral sex, but of our lives and fortunes and sacred happiness. He had become all human nature, the best and the worst, standing there naked in a sharp, dark suit, behind the TelePrompTer. That which does not kill him only makes him stronger, and his poll numbers went through the roof….That may have been a miracle, but it was no accident: Americans are less puritanical and more forgiving than the cartoon version suggests, and this President is never better than in his worst moments.” — Time magazine Senior Editor Nancy Gibbs, February 9, 1998 issue. Gibbs clearly doesn’t like her presidents to be overtly religious. She declared “We’ve seen what happens when it serves a president’s interest to flaunt his faith — which is almost inevitably does, since every poll affirms that Americans want their leader to submit to some higher power.” So what happens? She never elaborated. She lamented “Religious tests, a constitutional taboo, are a political tradition.”  Her liberal hero, naturally, is John F. Kennedy, who declared in 1960 that he came to Protestant pastors to talk about “now what kind of church I believe in , for that should be important only to me — but what kind of America I believe in.” She insisted “That was an America where church and state were absolutely separate and priests and preachers did not tell parishioners how to vote.” Clearly, Gibbs doesn’t really mean that progressive Reverends like Jesse Jackson (or even Reverend Wright) can’t tell their parishioners how to vote. She simply doesn’t like it when priests and preachers tell parishioners not to vote straight-ticket Democrat, like most well-coached Time magazine staffers.  

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Time Editor to Obama: Don’t Go to Church! It’s a ‘Piety Trap’!

JESUS sightings confirmed , 2nd coming?

Yes, its all true you can have a second coming on your pants too . Compact Christianity ,take “Jesus” with you everywhere . Let him preside over your next intimate encounter ,keep pesky whores and sinners alike at bay with the power of the church …We guarantee that Jesus will scare the hell outta any disbeliever . Devil watch out cause you got the savior on your pants .Impress your mom …Take him water sporting oh yea, neon Jesus is waterproof too. You cant hold him back he's Christ almighty neon JESUS and save matches cause hes flame retardant (like you didn't know!) let neon Jesus illuminate your path to a more heavenly place ….find your keys w/neon Jesus thank Christ it's neon Jesus…But don't listen to me read the bible or read it in the dark by the light of your immaculate neon Jesus He's alot more than a holy Jewish hippie savior he holds up your pants with divine intervention stay tuned for more from Figgdimension and neon Jesus see Jesus on display at http://artcell.tumblr.com some nudity required added by: figgdimension

Jack Cafferty’s Latest Rant Against Catholic Church: Ordain Women

On Tuesday’s Situation Room, CNN’s Jack Cafferty revisited one of his favorite subjects of ire, the Catholic Church, and this time called for the ordination of women. Cafferty highlighted the advertising campaign of a British organization which demands that Pope Benedict XVI allow for such simulations of ordination, and mocked a Catholic priest’s defense of the all-male priesthood. The commentator devoted his 6 pm Eastern hour Cafferty File segment to the issue of women’s ordination: “‘ Pope Benedict: ordain women now ‘- that’s the message that will be plastered on London buses when the pontiff heads to England’s capital in a couple of weeks. A group called Catholic Women’s Ordination is spending $15,000 for 15 buses to carry posters with that message around London for a month.” Cafferty then moved to the opposing viewpoint, and wasted little time before bashing it and one of its defenders: “Father Stephen Wang says women are not barred from the priesthood because of sexism….Wang says that Jesus chose 12 men, and no women, to be his apostles, and he adds that men and women are equal in Christianity, but that gender still matters. Wang compares the role of a priest to an actor, saying no one would be surprised if he wanted a male actor to play King Arthur. He then admits the analogy is weak. That’s the most startling and profound thing he said in the message so far- terrible! ” CNN’s “belief” blog (yes, the network has one) ran an article on Monday which gave further excerpts from Father Wang’s recent column on the priesthood : “Men and women are equal in Christianity, he continues, but ‘ this does not mean that our sexual identity as men and women is interchangeable. Gender is not just an accident .’ He [Father Wang] compared the role of a priest to that of an actor playing King Arthur…’No one would be surprised if I said I wanted a male actor to play the lead,’ he said, admitting the analogy was ‘weak.’ But, he said, ‘ it shouldn’t surprise us if we expect a man to stand in the person of Christ as a priest, to represent Jesus in his humanity – a humanity that is not sexually neutral .'” Cafferty later noted that “in addition to the bus campaign, the women’s group plans to hold a vigil the day before the Pope’s visit, and they plan to demonstrate outside the official London residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury.” That may seem a bit off, as the Archbishop of Canterbury, as he is the honorary chief cleric of Anglicanism, but the commentator didn’t explain that the planned protest will take place when Pope Benedict is meeting with the archbishop. He added that “in 1994, then-pope, John Paul II, declared the Catholic Church has no authority to ordain women , and Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, who is now pope, agreed with him.” After reading his “Question of the Hour,” the CNN personality remarked to anchor Wolf Blitzer that ” you could probably find people if you tried, Wolf, or even if you didn’t try very hard, who would tell you it’s way past time .” Blitzer replied, ” I know a lot of people agree with you on that, Jack- a lot of people out there .” Just before the top of the 7 pm Eastern hour, Cafferty read some of his viewer replies. Only one defended the Catholic position: CAFFERTY: Joanne in Pennsylvania writes, ‘It’s past time! There is a great need for priests, especially in the United States. We don’t know for sure that Jesus only choose 12 men, since it was men who decided what texts went into the New Testament. I think it is tradition, and not doctrine, that has kept women from becoming priests .’ Guillermo writes, ‘ I completely agree with Father Wang . Similar to babies being born from women only, the role of the priesthood was established for men only. As simple as Father Wang indicates it, the priest represents Jesus- a man.’ ‘Y’ writes, ‘If I were a woman, I’d tell the Catholic Church to take a hike. Why be obsequious to these clowns? The golden days of white male dominance are over .’ Joe in Houston writes, ‘As an ordained minister of the Church of Apathetic Agnostics, I don’t believe there’s any way I could care any less.’ Anthony in New Jersey: ‘ As a disavowed Catholic, I think the Church should just take down its shingle and declare moral bankruptcy. They demonize homosexuals, abuse children, and treat women like second-class citizens. They’re still in the Middle Ages, as our friends, the Islamic radicals. If a religion can’t teach tolerance and acceptance as their main precept, then they ought to just disband, and get out of the way of progress .’ Barker writes, ‘ The Anglican Church is basically the Catholic Church, except you can have women priests and the priests can marry . It seems to have worked fine for the Anglicans and the Episcopalians for the last few centuries, and you don’t see all the scandals with them that you see with the Catholic priests .’ And Dick writes, ‘Oh my goodness, no! The only things that remain the way the Almighty intended are the Catholic Church and the white male-only country clubs in South Carolina .’ Cafferty has long had an axe to grind against the Catholic Church. During a March 19, 2009 commentary, he attacked the pope’s comment against the effectiveness of condoms in reducing the spread of HIV in Africa: ” It’s time- it is past time for the Catholic Church to enter the 21st century, or at least try to drag itself out of the 13th century .” Earlier in 2010, Cafferty devoted five commentaries over the course of 20 days to blasting both Benedict XVI and the Church. Overall, CNN fares no better, with consistently slanted coverage against the Church . For example, during a March 26, 2010 segment , anchor Kyra Phillips endorsed the agenda of three guests who agitate for politically-correct changes inside the Catholic Church, including women’s ordination and the acceptance of homosexual behavior: ” I think all three of you need to head to the Vatican and institute some change .”

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Jack Cafferty’s Latest Rant Against Catholic Church: Ordain Women

Bishop Clay Sannar picture

Bishop Clay Sannar, 42, was shot dead in an office at Visalia#39;s Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Mestas said. A Mormon bishop was shot and killed in Visalia, California, on Sunday, police said. Bishop Clay Sannar was fatally shot at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Visalia, California. Church leaders and Ward#39;s relatives said he did not know Sannar. Members had directed him to the lay bishop after he had asked who was the leader of the congregation. Ward,

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Bishop Clay Sannar picture

Mormon Bishop shot Sanner

Police say Clay Sannar was shot at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Visalia, southeast of Fresno. A lay bishop at a Mormon church in Central California was shot dead in his office during a break between scheduled Sunday services, authorities said. The suspected gunman in the fatal shooting of a Mormon church official in Central California was mentally ill and believed the church had wronged him when he was a member in the 1980s, family members said Monday. Kenneth James Ward

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Mormon Bishop shot Sanner

Joe Scarborough and Grover Norquist Discuss Ground Zero….and 1650s New Amsterdam?

On Monday’s Morning Joe, Joe Scarborough returned to attacking the “anti-Muslim bigotry” inspiring protests against a Ground Zero mosque, asking Grover Norquist to denounce religious bigotry. Norquist obliged in a major way, comparing today’s Ground Zero activists to Calvinist leader Peter Stuyvesant trying to forbid synagogues in the New Amsterdam colony in the 1650s. Norquist explicitly suggested a Mormon like Beck should realize that he’s only been pushing the bigotry that was used against his own religious brethren. Scarborough also bizarrely found scandal in Beck questioning Obama’s Christianity, insisting “I don’t really know what his version of Christianity is. But I don’t think it’s any of our business to judge other people’s religious faith. What? But Joe Scarborough definitely questioned the Christianity of ObamaCare opponents on July 21, 2009 as he pressed conservative Sens. Tom Coburn and John Barrasso: SCARBOROUGH: In the ‘90s, everybody was wearing these “What Would Jesus Do” wrist bands. I wonder, what would Jesus think about walking in to any emergency room in any urban center at 11:00 or 12:00 at night and seeing all of these moms bringing their children from poor families who don’t have health care having to use emergency rooms as their primary care. Is that a moral system? Is there a better way to do it? How do we do it? We can’t just say no, can we? On Monday morning, Scarborough begged Norquist to dispose of the notion that Beck was holding a religious rally:   SCARBOROUGH: I think those people were there more out of fear, fear of where Washington’s heading than the people that were up on the stage. But Glenn Beck has said this was a religious rally. It wasn’t a political rally. That’s not really true, is it? NORQUIST:  I tend to think most of the people were coming there because they were speaking to the concern and fear that people have about all the massive spending and debt that’s been coming down the pike. And he was making religious comments. I guess it’s helpful after the Romney campaign where there was so much anti-Mormon bigotry sort of under the surface that Beck, who’s a Mormon, could comfortably participate in a movement like that and perhaps we’re beginning to put anti-Mormon bigotry behind us. SCARBOROUGH: But, but now we have anti-Muslim bigotry and you actually — NORQUIST: They are sticking with the M’s. SCARBOROUGH: You actually have Glenn Beck questioning Barack Obama’s version of Christianity. Now I really don’t know what his version of Christianity is. But I don’t think it is any of our business  to judge other people’s religious faith. I said it last week about Muslims and the week before about Muslims. I say it now about Glenn Beck, the day after this rally, questioning somebody’s version of Christianity. Isn’t there something a bit ominous about that and sort of throwing the Muslim shadow on Barack Obama? Because he thinks — I don’t think — he thinks that’s a bad thing. NORQUIST: it’s an interesting question, because when the mosque in New York came up, the Forward newspaper, the Jewish newspaper in New York pointed out that in history, in Manhattan under the Dutch and the British, synagogues were illegal. So the sort of — People have been through this. When the anti-Mormon feeling was very strong in the United States, when UItah wanted to send a senator, a Mormon leader senator to congress — to the Senate, it took four years of hearings before he was seated. And in New York, Mormon missionaries were banned by the mayor. So when people look at modern political uses of religious bigotry, we’ve been there before with the Mormons. We’ve been there before with the Jews. And you sort of hope that people whose own religious heritages have been hit by that would recognize what is happening and speak out, as many are doing. The article Norquist seems to be citing, by Brandeis professor Jonathan Sarna, isn’t quite as black and white as Norquist suggested. Stuyvesant, Sarna wrote, wanted Jews barred from the colony, but “Stuyvesant’s superiors in Holland overruled him, citing economic and political considerations.” In any case, comparing peaceful Jewish immigrants in the 1650s to Ground Zero after 3,000 Americans died is a flawed analogy. From there, Mika Brzezinski pressed Norquist to declare that something more “substantive and productive” than anti-socialist fears was driving this protest: MIKA BRZEZINSKI: But real quickly, what is the next step? Are you with a president who feels this is perhaps someone, a couple of people capitalizing on fears during tough economic times where there are many fears? Was it being driven by that, or something more substantive and productive? Was there a second sentence or — SCARBOROUGH: What is the follow-up? Yeah. NORQUIST: The follow-up, this is one of many rallies. I’m not a fan of national rallies. I would rather have had 300,000 people in 300 congressional districts with thousand-person rallies because that’s how you changes things and make real progress. About ten minutes into the 6 A.M, Brzezinski noted that according to Gallup, Obama’s highest approval rating is among Muslims (78 percent, compared to 60 percent of Jews, 50 percent of Catholics, 43 percent among Protestants, and just 24 percent among Mormons). She insisted she liked Obama talking about his faith to defend himself and accused conservatives of “promulgating evil” by suggesting Obama’s a Muslim:  I would say some even want it to be worse. It’s wrong, and incorrect and basically promulgating, I think, evil when you’re lying that way about someone’s heritage and then leaving — and about their faith and leaving kind of a dark nasty cloud over it and that is exactly what is happening. It is nothing less. And it should be condemned.   

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Joe Scarborough and Grover Norquist Discuss Ground Zero….and 1650s New Amsterdam?

‘Dancing With The Stars’ Pro Weighs In On Casting Rumors

The Situation, Audrina Patridge and Bristol Palin may compete on new season, Maksim Chmerkovskiy teases. By Jocelyn Vena, with reporting by Jim Cantiello Dancing With The Stars’ Maksim Chermovsky Photo: MTV News For weeks, names like the Situation, Audrina Patridge and Bristol Palin have been floating around as possible contenders on the next season of “Dancing With the Stars.” But with the official announcement only hours away — ABC will announce its new lineup on Monday night (August 30) — one “DWTS” regular said he wasn’t about to ruin the surprise. MTV News caught up with dancer Maksim Chmerkovskiy on Sunday night after the Emmy Awards, and he refused to give up much about who might be taking a shot at the mirror-ball trophy. “How many people out there really want to [know early]?” he asked when we met him at the “ET” Emmy afterparty. “I think that’s just spoiling it, the excitement. A lot of [the casting rumors] are [true], but there’s certain things, like, even if you know the cast, you don’t how they got paired up, which makes a huge difference and it’s going to be a lot of fun.” While Chmerkovskiy wouldn’t confirm or deny talk that the stars of MTV’s reality hits “Jersey Shore” or the “The Hills” would be making appearances, he admitted that in past seasons there have been contestants he didn’t want to hit the dance floor with. “I’ve been dodging bullets many seasons, but then again sometimes you get paired up, and you go, ‘Jesus,’ ” he revealed. “Then you find out about the person and you try and figure out a way to make it work and you make it work and it turns into a great show.” Chmerkovskiy said that while he had yet to begin rehearsals for the new season, the dancers and their celeb partners were already being introduced. “This weekend is when couples meet each other, or maybe tomorrow, maybe today, but I think tomorrow’s the last day when people meet each other,” he said. “You find out 20 minutes before [you meet them] who you’re dancing with. The producers I think [want] to avoid the ‘What the hell?’ reaction, and then you go to the studio, they walk in and you go, ‘You didn’t put on weight since last time I saw you somewhere,’ and it’s awesome,’ ” he explained about the process. “It’s fun.” Chmerkovskiy added that regardless of who he gets paired with, not much about “DWTS” phases him these days. “We’re going into season 11; it’s my ninth season … As pros, we’ve been there. We’ve done it, we’ve danced with everybody. We’ll make it work,” he said. “We’ll just have to wait and see!” Which MTV stars would you like to see compete on “DWTS”? Share your casting wish list in the comments! Related Photos The 2010 Cast Of ‘Dancing With The Stars’

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‘Dancing With The Stars’ Pro Weighs In On Casting Rumors

Kid Rock’s Born Free Due November 16

New album will contain collaborations with T.I., Sheryl Crow and Zac Brown. By Gil Kaufman Kid Rock Photo: JulNeil Lupin/ Redferns There’s no way you’re going to be able to confuse Kid Rock ‘s upcoming album Born Free with twitch-pop bomb-thrower M.I.A.’s song of the same name . First of all, Rock’s eighth studio album, due November 16, was produced by legendary knobmeister Rick Rubin. Second, even though Rock, like M.I.A., will release a song called “Born Free” as his first single, the Detroit bad boy’s tune focuses not on world affairs, but on the economic decline of his hometown, Detroit. A press release announcing the album calls Born Free “transformational,” going on to note that while Rock retains his “edge, wit, and swagger” on the record, he has left his rap-metal roots behind. “There isn’t even a parental warning sticker,” the release says. Rock described how D-town inspired the Americana feel of some tracks. “The catalyst for this record was Detroit, and my thoughts on the world through the lens of Detroit,” he said. “Watching everything go downhill over the past few years, the economy, the loss of jobs everywhere, I wanted to make a record that reflected the times but that still had soul.” Most of the album was recorded during a two-week session in Los Angeles with a band that included Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers keyboardist Benmont Tench, Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Chad Smith, Los Lobos guitarist/singer David Hidalgo and Chavez guitarist Matt Sweeney. The release also noted that Rock logged time in studios in Detroit, Nashville and Atlanta to lay down collaborations with fellow hometown rock icon Bob Seger, former flame Sheryl Crow, Zac Brown and Trace Adkins. T.I. and Martina McBride will appear on a song called “Care.” The disc is the follow-up to 2007’s slow-burn success Rock N Roll Jesus , which produced the Lynyrd Skynyrd-inspired 2008 hit “All Summer Long.” Rock provided a preview of the album earlier this month when he performed six of its songs during a series of hometown shows. In addition to the Detroit-boosting anthem “Times Like These,” he pulled the cover back on the Springsteen-like title track, the midtempo “Slow My Roll,” the somber “Rock On,” the 1970s-style rocker “Feels Good to Me” and the Rolling Stones-influenced “God Bless Saturday.” Related Artists Kid Rock

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Kid Rock’s Born Free Due November 16

WaPo Finds It Scandalous Beck Would Challenge Obama’s Religious Beliefs

The Washington Post found it newsworthy that “Beck challenges Obama’s religious beliefs after rally in D.C.,” but emphasized how Glenn Beck’s views could cause a backlash, and papered over Rev. Jeremiah Wright’s wild-eyed radical sermons as merely focusing on “the importance of empowering the oppressed.” In the story on page A-4, Post reporter Felicia Sonmez made no mention of the president’s avoidance of church services while she repeated the White House assertion that he’s a “committed Christian.” Here’s the summation:  During an interview on “Fox News Sunday,” which was filmed after Saturday’s rally, Beck claimed that Obama “is a guy who understands the world through liberation theology, which is oppressor-and-victim.” “People aren’t recognizing his version of Christianity,” Beck added. Beck’s attacks represent a continuing attempt to characterize Obama as a radical, an approach that has prompted anxiety among some Republicans, who worry that Beck’s rhetoric could backfire . The White House has all but ignored his accusations, but some Democrats have pointed to the Fox News host to portray Republicans as extreme and out of touch . Notice that the Post doesn’t suggest that Rev. Wright’s rhetoric can, and has been used to portray Obama and his Democrat supporters as extreme and out of touch. Here’s how Sonmez summarized the rants of Wright: The Rev. Jeremiah A. Wright Jr., the onetime pastor of Obama’s former church in Chicago, is an adherent of black liberation theology, which centers on the struggles of African Americans and the importance of empowering the oppressed. Obama severed ties with Wright during the presidential campaign after some of the minister’s inflammatory language drew controversy. Beck, on his Fox News show last Tuesday, said that liberation theology is at the core of Obama’s “belief structure.” “You see, it’s all about victims and victimhood; oppressors and the oppressed; reparations, not repentance; collectivism, not individual salvation. I don’t know what that is, other than it’s not Muslim, it’s not Christian. It’s a perversion of the gospel of Jesus Christ as most Christians know it,” Beck said. Sonmez didn’t note that Wright’s “liberation” theology has roots in Marxism . She also ignored that Wright suggested just days after 9/11 that America deserved the terrorist attack for its imperialism or his kooky view that the federal government created AIDS as a tool of black genocide. But editing those specifics out is a common media practice .

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WaPo Finds It Scandalous Beck Would Challenge Obama’s Religious Beliefs

Jesus was Latino!

Francisco Ramos has the inside scoop on why Jesus was Latino. added by: jubal