Sunday, December 30, 2007

A Day With My Missionary Sons

Okay, first let me explain the "missionary sons" comment. I may have mentioned before that there was a time, before life became so incredibly insane, that Alvin and I had the missionaries over for dinner every Monday. We also would drive them around town so they could run their errands, do their shopping, etc. Over the course of time we became very close to a few, although we enjoyed them all very much.

When Elder Jensen, now Jordan, was still on his mission he promised me he would come back after his mission was over and we'd have a Lord of the Rings, extended version, moviethon.

Well, yesterday was the big day! Yup, it took us 11 1/2 hours . . . and yes, we were bleary-eyed by the time it was over. But it was so much fun! I think my butt was paralyzed by the end of the day. We started at about 10:30 yesterday morning and finished at 10:00 last night. Sheesh, I have never, NEVER, NEVER watched t.v. that long, sat in one place for that long, not done anything but socialize and watch t.v. that long! I think a part of my brain atrophied! But I have to admit, it was a total blast!

Anyhow, here are two of my boys!

This is Elder Jordan Jensen and he served in the Utah Provo Mission, along with all of our other missionary sons: Jordan, Jarel Singh, Joao Saraiva, David Woolsey . . . if I missed one it's because my brain is fried!

Jordan lives in Canada where he's going to school and working with his parents on some restoration projects. He's a farm boy at heart and from the moment Alvin and I met him we just welcomed him into our hearts.

He's my Lord of the Rings buddy! And by the way, I don't think I'm ever going to do that again, 11 1/2 hours WAY TOO LONG to watch t.v.

On the the 26th of this month, Jarel Singh, another of our missionary sons came to visit. Alvin picked him up at the airport and he's been staying with us. He and Jordan were companions for quite a long while, but he'd always said there was no way he'd join us on our Lord of the Rings moviethon. But he did, bless his heart.

It really was a lot of fun.

Jarel, blue t-shirt, is from Fiji, but he and has parents now live in California. He's working in Northern California but is planning on being at either BYU or BYU-Idaho by the summer or fall. He's a wonderful young man and we love him so much! He's Fijian/Nepalese, and he and Alvin just connected right off the bat. To me, I believe he's very much like what my sons would have been like had they lived.

We're enjoying our visit with him and ladies, if you have sisters or daughters in the early twenties age group, my boy is available!

Jarel is helping me move my office and library downstairs (and yes, it's a huge task and we still have a lot to do.) He spent the entire day, on Friday, helping me rearrange everything, haul my desk from the garage to the new office area and set it up. Always willing to help, always a sweetheart. We think the world of him! I am having so much fun visiting with him and getting him to know him out side of his missionary role, the same with Jordan.

Ah shoot, here are a couple more. Joao Saraiva is visiting family in California, but will be here on January 4th, to attend BYU. He's another of our missionary sons that we absolutely adore. All these young men are so fine! They were stellar missionaries, dedicated to the work. And now, that they are home from their missions and going to school, or getting ready to, we remain very impressed with them.

Every time I go to visit my friend, Linda, in Rigby, Idaho or my brother in Idaho Falls (who just moved to Rigby as well) I call Joao and we meet at Craigo's and catch up over pizza bombs. Now that he's moved here to Provo, which I'm very happy about, I'm going to have to find a new pizza bomb buddy!

So ladies, Jarel and Joao are both available . . . come to think of it, I think my nephew Sete is as well. Y'all remember him . . . right?

Cute, smart, sweet . . . he's the one on the right (my left, your right!)

He graduates in April with a degree in Sociology, was the captain of the 2007 BYU Cougar football team and we just love this young man so much!

You know, all these young men really have restored my faith in the men of this generation.

I think I feel a chorus of "Matchmaker, matchmaker, make me match . . . " Huh, maybe I should apply for a "yenta" job. Whaddya think?

Only sharp, sweet, daughters of God need apply!

Time to get ready for church. See you all in Blogland.

Saturday, December 29, 2007

U.S. Soldlier Adopts Handicapped Iraqi Boy

From MSNBC: 23 December, 2007 AP -- I had to share this story. It's an example of how Jesus would want us to behave . . . this soldier's story touched my heart so deeply.

'Miracles' after U.S. soldier decides to adopt Iraqi

‘Passion of Christ’ inspires American to bring disabled boy back to the U.S.


MAUSTON, Wis. - Capt. Scott Southworth knew he'd face violence, political strife and blistering heat when he was deployed to one of Baghdad's most dangerous areas. But he didn't expect Ala'a Eddeen.

Ala'a was 9 years old, strong of will but weak of body — he suffered from cerebral palsy and weighed just 55 pounds. He lived among about 20 kids with physical or mental disabilities at the Mother Teresa orphanage, under the care of nuns who preserved this small oasis in a dangerous place.

On Sept. 6, 2003, halfway through his 13-month deployment, Southworth and his military police unit paid a visit to the orphanage. They played and chatted with the children; Southworth was talking with one little girl when Ala'a dragged his body to the soldier's side.

Black haired and brown eyed, Ala'a spoke to the 31-year-old American in the limited English he had learned from the sisters. He recalled the bombs that struck government buildings across the Tigris River.

"Bomb-Bing! Bomb-Bing!" Ala'a said, raising and lowering his fist.

"I'm here now. You're fine," the captain said.

Over the next 10 months, the unit returned to the orphanage again and again. The soldiers would race kids in their wheelchairs, sit them in Humvees and help the sisters feed them.

To Southworth, Ala'a was like a little brother. But Ala'a — who had longed for a soldier to rescue him — secretly began referring to Southworth as "Baba," Arabic for "Daddy."

Then, around Christmas, a sister told Southworth that Ala'a was getting too big. He would have to move to a government-run facility within a year.

"Best case scenario was that he would stare at a blank wall for the rest of his life," Southworth said.

To this day, he recalls the moment when he resolved that that would not happen.

"I'll adopt him," he said.

So many reasons not to help. Before Southworth left for Iraq, he was chief of staff for a state representative. He was single, worked long days and squeezed in his service as a national guardsman — military service was a family tradition. His great-great-greatgrandfather served in the Civil War, his grandfather in World War II, his father in Vietnam.

The family had lived in the tiny central Wisconsin city of New Lisbon for 150 years. Scott was raised as an evangelical Christian; he attended law school with a goal of public service, running unsuccessfully for state Assembly at the age of 25.

There were so many reasons why he couldn't bring a handicapped Iraqi boy into his world.

He had no wife or home; he knew nothing of raising a disabled child; he had little money and planned to run for district attorney in his home county.

Just as important, Iraqi law prohibits foreigners from adopting Iraqi children.

Southworth prayed and talked with family and friends.

His mother, who had cared for many disabled children, explained the difficulty. She also told him to take one step at a time and let God work.

Southworth's decision was cemented in spring 2004, while he and his comrades watched Mel Gibson's film, "The Passion of the Christ." Jesus Christ's sacrifice moved him. He imagined meeting Christ and Ala'a in heaven, where Ala'a asked: "Baba, why didn't you ever come back to get me?"

"Everything that I came up with as a response I felt ashamed. I wouldn't want to stand in the presence of Jesus and Ala'a and say those things to him."

And so, in his last weeks in Iraq, Southworth got approval from Iraq's Minister of Labor to take Ala'a to the United States for medical care.

He was told it would be nearly impossible. His parents had filed signatures so he wouldn't miss the cutoff to run for district attorney. He knocked on doors, telling people he wanted to be tough on criminals who committed injustices against children.

He never mentioned his intention to adopt Ala'a.

He won office — securing a job and an income.

Everything seemed to be in place. But when Southworth contacted an immigration attorney, he was told it would be nearly impossible to bring Ala'a to the United States.

Ala'a prays to be taken to America. Undaunted, Southworth and the attorney started the paperwork to bring Ala'a over on humanitarian parole, used for urgent reasons or significant public benefit.

A local doctor, a cerebral palsy expert, a Minneapolis hospital, all said they would provide Ala'a free care. Other letters of support came from a minister, the school district, the lieutenant governor, a congressman, chaplain, a sister at the orphanage and an Iraqi doctor.

"We crossed political boundaries. We crossed religious boundaries. There was just a massive effort — all on behalf of this little boy who desperately needed people to actually take some action and not just feel sorry for him," Southworth said.

He mailed the packet on Dec. 16, 2004, to the Department of Homeland Security.

On New Year's Eve, his cell phone rang. It was Ala'a.

"What are you doing?" Scott asked him.

"I was praying,'" Ala'a responded.

"Well, what were you praying for?"

"I prayed that you would come to take me to America," Ala'a said.

Southworth almost dropped the phone. Ala'a knew nothing of his efforts, and he couldn't tell him yet for fear that the boy might inadvertently tell the wrong person, upending the delicate process.

'And forever started.' By mid-January, Homeland Security called Southworth's attorney to say it had approved humanitarian parole. Within three hours, Southworth had plane tickets.

He hardly slept as he worked the phones to make arrangements, calling the American embassy, hotels and the orphanage. His Iraqi translator agreed to risk his life to get Ala'a to the embassy to obtain documentation. Like a dream, all the pieces fell into place.

Southworth returned to Iraq for the first time since a deployment that left him emotionally, physically and spiritually exhausted.

His unit had trained Iraqi police from sunup to sundown; he saw the devastation wrought by two car bombings, and counted dead bodies. Mortar and rocket attacks were routine. Some 20 in his unit were wounded, and one died. He knew that nothing could be taken for granted in Baghdad.

So when he saw Ala'a in the airport for the first time since leaving Iraq, he was relieved.

"He was in my custody then. I could hug him. I could hold him. I could protect him.

"And forever started."

They made it to Wisconsin late Jan. 20, 2005. The next morning, Ala'a awoke to his first sight of snow.

He closed his eyes and grimaced.

"Baba! Baba! The water is getting all over me!"

"It's not water, it's snooooow," Southworth told him.

Thriving in America. Police found Ala'a abandoned on a Baghdad street at around 3 years old. No one knows where he came from.

In all his life in Iraq, Ala'a saw a doctor 10 times. He surpassed that in his first six months in the United States.

Ala'a's cerebral palsy causes low muscle tone, spastic muscles in the legs, arms and face. It hinders him when he tries to crawl, walk or grasping objects. He needs a wheelchair to get around, often rests his head on his shoulder and can't easily sit up.

hysical therapy has helped him control his head and other muscles. He can now maneuver his way out of his van seat and stabilize his legs on the ground.

"I'm not the same guy I used to be," he said.

He clearly has thrived. At 13, he's doubled his weight to 111 pounds.

Tears filled his eyes. Ala'a's condition doesn't affect his mind, although he's still childlike — he wants to be a Spiderman when he grows up.

Ala'a's English has improved and he loves music and school, math and reading especially. He gets mad when snow keeps him home, even though it's his second favorite thing, after his father.

At first, he didn't want to talk about Iraq; he would grow angry when someone tried to talk to him in Arabic. But in the fall of 2006, Scott showed Ala'a's classmates an Arabic version of "Sesame Street" and boasted how Ala'a knew two languages and could teach them.

Soon he was teaching his aide and his grandmother, LaVone.

LaVone is a fixture in Ala'a's life, supporting her son as he juggles his career and fatherhood. One day, she asked Ala'a if he missed his friends in Iraq.

Would he like to visit them?

Big tears filled his eyes.

"Well, honey, what's the matter?" asked LaVone.

"Oh, no, Grandma. No. Baba said that I can come to live with him forever," he pleaded.

"Oh, no, no," he grandmother said, crying as well. "We would never take you back and leave you there forever. We want you to be Baba's boy forever."

The hardest part is over Southworth knew once he got Ala'a out of Iraq, the hardest part would be over. Iraq had bigger problems to deal with than the whereabouts of a single orphan.

On June 4, Ala'a officially became Southworth's son. Though he was born in the spring of 1994, they decided to celebrate his birthday as the day they met — Sept. 6.

Life has settled into a routine. Father and son have moved into a new house with an intercom system, a chair lift to the basement and toilet handles.

Southworth showers him, brushes his teeth and washes his hands. He has traded in his Chrysler Concorde for a minivan — it was too hard to lift his son out of the car.

In October, the Wisconsin's deputy adjunct general gave Southworth, now a major, permission to change units because of Ala'a. His former unit was going to Guantanamo Bay for a one-year deployment, and he didn't want to leave his son behind, at least for now.

He hopes one day to marry to his longtime girlfriend and have more children. He may run for Congress or governor someday — he's already won re-election once, and plans to run again next fall.

'Life is a gift they say.' Not everything is perfect. Ala'a never encountered thunderstorms in Baghdad, and the flash-boom reminds him of bombs. He is starting to get over it, although he still weeps during violent storms.

But Ala'a — who picked out his own name, which means to be near God — knows he's where he belongs. Southworth always said Ala'a picked him, not the other way around. They were brought together, Southworth believes, by a "web of miracles."

Ala'a likes to sing Sarah McLachlan's song, "Ordinary Miracle," from "Charlotte's Web," one of his favorite movies. His head and body lean to one side as he sings off-key.

"It's just another ordinary miracle today. Life is like a gift they say. Wrapped up for you everyday."

Copyright by the Associated Press

Friday, December 28, 2007

Presidential Primaries Coming Up!

A quick reminder, state presidential primaries are coming up starting next week. This upcoming Presidential election involves a number of very serious issues. I ask each of you to spend a little time over the next few days and research each candidate and their stance on the issues.
  • Are you pro-democracy and anti-socialism? Then stay away from the Democrats.
  • Are you pro-abortion, pro-big government, anti-military, and anti-second amendment? Then vote for one of the Democrats.
  • Are you pro-democracy, pro-life, anti-big government, pro-military, pro-second amendment . . . then vote for a Republican.
Other than that, you need to choose from the vast field of candidates, of which there are many. I've already made my choice and am voting for Mitt Romney. Have you made your choice yet? Candidate and issue rundowns are on the right-hand side of my blog. You're welcome to take a look there.

It is one of the sweetest privileges Americans have, to elect their leaders. My father, robbed of all his freedoms, when he was a child, by the Nazis constantly spoke to us, schools and churches across the nation about that time in his life and the incredible freedom and responsibility Americans have. Here are some dates, check and see if I have the date of your state presidential primary. Almost everyone has moved their primaries up . . . so make sure you are registered to vote and cast your vote for your presidential nominee.

- Jan 3: Iowa Democratic and Republican Presidential Caucuses

- Jan 5: Wyoming Republican Presidential Caucus

- Jan 7: Mail/agency voter registration deadline for Utah Presidential Primary

- Jan 8: New Hampshire Democratic and Republican Presidential primaries

- Jan 15: Michigan Democratic and Republican Presidential Primaries

- Jan 16: Overseas voter absentee ballot request deadline for Utah Presidential Primary.

- Jan 22: Early voting period begins for Utah Presidential Primary

- Jan 26: South Carolina Democratic Presidential Primary

- Jan 29: Florida Democratic and Republican Presidential Primaries

- Jan 29: In-person voter registration deadline for Utah Presidential Primary

- Jan 29: Absentee ballot application for Utah Presidential Primary

- Feb 1: Maine Republican Presidential Primary

- Feb 1: Early voting period ends (5:00 p.m.) for Utah Presidential Primary

- Feb 4: In-office absentee voting ends for Utah Presidential Primary

- Feb 4: Mailed absentee ballot post mark deadline for Utah Presidential Primary

- Feb 5: Alabama, Alaska, Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Utah Republican and Democratic Primaries and Caucuses.

- Feb 9: Kansas, Washington and Louisiana Republican Primaries and Caucuses

- Feb 9: Louisiana, Nebraska, and Washington Democratic Primaries and Caucuses

- Feb 10: Maine Democratic Presidential Caucus

- Feb 12: District of Columbia, Maryland, Pennsylvania, and Virginia Republican Presidential Primaries and Caucuses.

- Feb 12: Maryland and Virginia Democratic Presidential Caucuses

- Feb 19: Wisconsin Republican Presidential Primary

- Feb 19: Hawaii and Wisconsin Democratic Presidential Primaries and Caucuses

- Mar 1: American Samoa Republican Presidential Caucus

- Mar 4: Ohio, Rhode Island, Texas, and Vermont Republican and Democratic Presidential Primaries

- Mar 8: Wyoming Democratic Presidential Caucus

- Mar 10: American Samoa Democratic Presidential Caucus

- Mar 11: Mississippi Republican and Democratic Presidential Primary

- Apr 3: District of Columbia Democratic Presidential Caucus

- Apr 5: Virgin Islands Republican Presidential Primary

- Apr 22: Pennsylvania Democratic Presidential Caucus

- May 6: Indiana and North Carolina Republican and Democratic Presidential Primaries

- May 13: Nebraska Republican Presidential Caucus

- May 13: West Virginia Democratic Presidential Primary

- May 17: Hawaii Republican Presidential Caucus

- May 20: Kentucky and Oregon Republican and Democratic Presidential Primaries

- May 27: Idaho Republican Presidential Primary

- June 3: South Dakota Republican Presidential Primary

- June 3: Montana and South Dakota Democratic Presidential Primaries

- June 7: Puerto Rico Democratic Presidential Caucus

- Sept 1-4: Republican National Convention, Minneapolis, MN

- November 4th: Presidential Election Day! Don't forget to vote!

Sidenote: Why, when their hope for Pakistan was assassinated are her followers doing this:
One man was killed in a shootout between police and protesters in Tando Allahyar, a town 120 miles north of Karachi, Pakistan's commercial hub, said Mayor Kanwar Naveed. Four others were killed in Karachi, two were killed elsewhere in the southern Sindh province and two in Lahore, police said.

Karachi shopkeepers quickly shuttered their stores as protesters burned vehicles, a gas station and tires on the roads, said Fayyaz Leghri, a local police official. Gunmen shot and wounded two police officers, he said.

Bhutto's supporters in many towns burned banks, shops and state-run grocery stores. Some torched ruling party election offices, according to Pakistani media. (MSNBC)
They turn on each other, on their political opponents, on the government . . . I don't know if Musharraf had anything to do with the assassination or not. What I do know is that Al Qaida and Taliban leaders have repeatedly threatened Bhutto with death. They have proven, over and over, that they always carry out their mad, horrific and decidedly anti-Allah schemes. So why, may I ask, have the people of Pakistan imploded rather than cleaning house. Capture and punish on Al Qaida and all Taliban . . . that'll be start. Then understand the democratic process and push it forward rather than immediately sinking into a barbaric past where death and mayhem rule.

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto Assassinated

From MSNBC we learned this morning:
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan - Pakistan opposition leader Benazir Bhutto was assassinated Thursday in a suicide bombing that also killed at least 20 others at a campaign rally.

The death of the charismatic former prime minister threw the campaign for the Jan. 8 election into chaos and created fears of mass protests and an eruption of violence across the volatile south Asian nation, which has nuclear weapons and a support base for Muslim extremists.

Pakistani troops were put on "red alert" across the country as President Pervez Musharraf condemned the attack and urged citizens to avoid further bloodshed.
And why should this matter to us? Many, many reasons the least of which Benazir Bhutto, who was Prime Minister of Pakistan twice in the 1980's, was a pro-western politician. She was very forward thinking and a woman of great power and strength. She was also Muslim. A woman in power in a Muslim nation is sure to be a target at all times and in all places. Today proved that very tragic fact.

Since her return to Pakistan, which was a very dangerous move, as we can now see, she was has been campaigning to reclaim the office of Prime Minister from Pervez Musharraf. Taliban and Al Qaida followers are thick in Pakistan since being routed from Afghanistan. Musharraf has done nothing to round them up and prosecute them, rather, he has welcomed high-ranking officials in both groups into his government who now hold high-ranking positions in that government.

Musharraf has been a "friend" to the U.S. in word, but in deed he has done nothing to curtail the rising militant movements in his nation. She had received numerous death threats from both Al Qaida and Taliban operatives . . . Musharraf certainly wasn't feeling friendly toward her.

Fox News reports that Pakistan is in possession of over one hundred nuclear weapons. U.S. officials had hoped that Benazir Bhutto would reclaim power and bring stability to an increasingly unstable nation.
Bhutto’s return to the country after years in exile and the ability of her party to contest free and fair elections had been a cornerstone of Bush’s policy in Pakistan, where U.S. officials had watched Musharraf’s growing authoritarianism with increasing unease.

Those concerns were compounded by the rising threat from al-Qaida and Taliban extremists, particularly in Pakistan’s largely ungoverned tribal areas bordering Afghanistan despite the fact that Washington had pumped nearly $10 billion in aid into the country since Musharraf became an indispensable counter-terrorism ally after Sept. 11, 2001.

Irritated by the situation, Congress last week imposed new restrictions on U.S. assistance to Pakistan, including tying $50 million in military aid to State Department assurances that the country is making “concerted efforts” to prevent terrorists from operating inside its borders.

Under the law, which provides a total of $300 million in aid to Pakistan and was signed by President Bush on Wednesday, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice also must guarantee Pakistan is implementing democratic reforms, including releasing political prisoners and restoring an independent judiciary. (MSNBC.com)

As Americans, we have cause to be worried about this tragic event. Protests have sprung up around the nation. Bhutto's supporters are claiming Musharraf was behind the assassination. Musharraf is condemning the assassination, while I am sure being very relieved his only real opponent is now dead. Instability in the one Muslim nation in possession of nuclear weapons is cause for great concern.

We shall have to stand back and see what occurs. If Al Qaida and Taliban troops manage to take over the nation they now have the arsenal they have long fought, murdered, raped and pillaged for . . . then what will we do? Look very carefully and the candidates for the 2008 Presidential election . . . we do not want, under any circumstances a politicians willing to play craps with the lives of our military and the American people. We do not want, under any circumstances, a politicians who think we all just need to play nice and the bad people will go away. We can not have a coward in office. Think very carefully before you cast your votes in the upcoming elections. The situation in the Middle East has now become much more unstable, and it wasn't in great shape to begin with.

Wednesday, December 26, 2007

LDS Storymakers Writers Conference

It's that time of year again. I look forward to it every single year. The very first year I attended the first annual LDStorymakers Writer's Conference, I met the publisher who eventually published my first three books.

Writers Conferences are the way writers develop their skills, their peer network, get their work before publishers in a face-to-face meeting and spend a weekend surrounded by people who think like you do!

Of the 2007 LDS Storymakers Writers Conference this was said:
I have been to many writer's conferences during my ten years as Acquisitions Editor for Deseret Book Company, and I can say without hesitation that the LDStorymaker's Conference is one of the best I've ever attended. I was impressed by so many things about the Conference: the classes were exceptional, the presenters were stellar, the speakers were inspirational, the attendees were enthusiastic. I left the Conference thinking to myself, "Here are the writers who are devoted to their craft, who are willing to work hard and be persistent, who understand the business of writing and of publishing. Here are the writers who are going to revolutionize the LDS writing world." I was so happy to have met so many great people who are involved in such a thriving, active writer's community. I look forward to reading the work that will come as a direct result of the Conference. It truly was a privilege to attend the 2007 LDStorymakers Writers Conference.

~ Lisa Mangum, Acquisitions Editor, Deseret Book Company
Registration for the 5th Annual LDStorymakers Writers Conference (March 21 & 22, 2008) is now available. We've simplified the registration process so you can pay online. Even Storymakers have to register, and I already did it. I'm so excited about this year's conference! I want to see each of you there, so join us! Click on the Storymaker logo to vote. Click on the link above . . . . just click, register and I'll look forward to seeing each of you at the conference.

This year is shaping up to be our best conference ever. Among the highlights:
  • One of our keynote speakers is Timothy Travaglini, Senior Editor at G.P. Putnam's Sons (a division of Penguin Group, USA). For those of you who know Janette Rallison, he is her editor (known by her blog readers as the "bow-tied" one).
  • The return of Boot Camp, the hugely popular hands-on critique workshop prior to the regular conference each day. Tristi Pinkston and I are in charge this year.
  • A Publishers' panel, with representatives from all the major LDS publishing houses.
  • Pitch sessions with both Covenant and Deseret Book
  • Manuscript reviews with Tim Tavaglini
  • Choice of some 20 break-out workshops taught by established authors (including me) on a wide range of topics and covering all skill levels.
  • A writing contest
  • Entertainment by comedian David Nibley (best known from his role in The Best Two Years and one of the funniest guys around)
  • Several keynote speakers you won't want to miss
  • and more

Part of that "more" is what immediately follows the conference: The first-ever Whitney Awards Gala. Awards given in celebration of the finest in fiction written by LDS authors.

We will yet have Miltons and Shakespeares of our own. God's ammunition is not exhausted. His brightest spirits are held in reserve for the latter times. In God's name and by His help we will build up a literature whose top shall touch heaven, though it's foundations be low in the earth." ~ Orson F. Whitney

This is the standard by which the Whitney Awards are run. So jump on over to the Whitney Awards website and nominate your favorite book by an LDS author published from January 1st to December 31st of 2007. Counting today, you have six more days to nominate -- so don't assume your favorite book of the year is a shoo-in, if you don't nominate it, it may never make the cut.

Another note: The facilities for the conference demand that we cap the number of attendees, so if you plan to come, sign up soon to reserve your spot. Likewise, the pitch sessions by Deseret Book and Covenant and the manuscript reviews by Mr. Travaglini are filling up fast, even though registration has been open for only a couple of days. If you want to snag one of those, hop to it!

Heather Moore and Annette Lyon and their terrific committee, have been doing behind-the-scenes work for spring of 2008, and it's exciting to see the pieces gradually coming together.It's always informative. It's always fun. It's always useful. It's always a blast! See you in March!

And on a completely unrelated final note: “In the old days, it was not called the Holiday Season; the Christians called it 'Christmas' and went to church; the Jews called it 'Hanukkah' and went to synagogue; the atheists went to parties and drank. People passing each other on the street would say 'Merry Christmas!' or 'Happy Hanukkah!' or (to the atheists) 'Look out for the wall!' ~ Dave Barry, "Christmas Shopping: A Survivor's Guide" (Quote Garden)

Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Merry Christmas Everyone!

Merry Christmas everyone. I hope this day brings you so much joy, peace and happiness. I pray that your family will literally feel of the love and care our Savior feels for each and everyone. Celebrating this time of year is so amazing and so this post will be short with Rebecca Talley's tag included.

Remember to pull your families close and love them as if this were the last day you had with them. Remember how precious they are and the great and sacred gift life is, given to us by our Heavenly Father. Remember the incredible gift He gave us in His Son, Jesus Christ and the tremendous love Jesus showed by suffering for all our sins and sorrow and then breaking the bands of death. May 2008 be filled with happiness, peace and new levels of spiritual heights for each of you! Merry Christmas from the Salima Household.

Merry Christmas!

Now, on to Rebecca's tag!

Rebecca Talley tagged me . . . and I have to be honest, it's getting harder and harder to come up with things about me.

With this one, I have to come up with seven things about me. I think it only fair that it not be seven things I've already mentioned in the 100 things, or the other seven things I did, or the Christmas tag I did for Mike.

So thanks, Rebecca. I'm really having to put my brain to work!

Rules of the Meme:

1) Link to the person who tagged you and post the rules on your blog.
2) Share 7 facts about yourself.
3) Tag 7 random people at the end of your post, and include links to their blogs.
4) Let each person know that they have been tagged by leaving a comment on their blog.

Seven Things About Me:

1. I have been called an apologist . . . I rather prefer being called a Defender of the Faith . . . has a more positive ring to it. But it turns out being called an apologist is a good thing . . . still like the other title better.

The gospel of Jesus Christ is something that fills me to overflowing and I can do little else but reach out and share. Hence certain posts on this blog and my job at http://ldsblogs.com/. I seriously have a dream job . . . love all aspects of it. I not only manage the bloggers and the content on http://ldsblogs.com/, but I also write in the Basic Beliefs and Leaders topics, and a few others as the need arises. I love it!

2. You may not know this about me, but I am a serious, die-hard Cougar football fan . . . oh yeah, you already knew that. This is a little harder than I thought. How much did it rock that BYU won the Las Vegas Bowl! Oh yeah, the day was saved by Ethan, our nephew. How cool was that! Alvin and I were so proud.

3. Oh, oh, I got it. I'm the worst scrapbooker in the world! My best friend from high school, Linda, is taking all my pictures and going to create scrapbooks for me. Just cause she loves me. I'm terrible really, boxes of pictures, piled upon one another, news and magazine articles about me, my writing, my defending the church, piled in the same boxes . . . its a sad thing. Good thing Linda's going to save me!

4. I'm a member of LDS Storymakers, a group of authors, numbering over seventy now, who write literature aimed toward members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Our purpose is to encourage authors who have already worked hard to get where they are, to strengthen the cause of literacy, and to increase the level of LDS writing.

Every year we host a Writers Conference that has grown in size and recognition until we are now receiving endorsements from some of the top publishers in the LDS Market. 2008's conference is in Sandy, Utah this year, March 21st and 22nd.

I always teach at this conference, and 2008 is no different, as do upwards of twenty to thirty other published authors, any many other authors helping in a variety of ways. Tristi Pinkston and I are in charge of the Writers Boot Camp this year . . . yeah, it's going to rock! It's one of my favorite times of year!

Sheesh - I gotta come up with three more things about me? I'm hurtin'! This has already taken me three days to come up with these three things. My guess is its going to take at least four more . . . hey, did everybody see that National Treasure II is out? Yeah, Alvin and I are going to watch it at first opportunity, which is probably tomorrow (December 18th, not whatever day this now.) -- Okay, we didn't see it, hopefully the day after Christmas!

5. Alvin and I live in the city, but I long for the day when we can settle on a small ranch, just a hundred acres or so and run some cattle and horses. It may never happen, but a girl can dream, can't she? Oh yeah, I'd have to have a foreman and some ranch hands because I really hate doing ranch and farm work. I know, odd. I just want to enjoy the ambiance and ride my horse whenever I feel like it.

6. I'm just one in a long line of artisans, musicians and writers in my family line. Here's hoping I can live up to the high standard they set! Oh yeah, and my great-grandmother was a doctor too. No slouchers amongst my ancestors . . . well, except for ---

7. I'm one of those people that just can't do anything small. When I am given a task I always say "sure" (which I really ought to reconsider that response one of these days) and then sit down to plan. Within a few hours, days at the out, a plan comes together and I'm off and running and it just gets bigger and better and before I know it I'm running around like a chicken with my head cut off (huh, there's an image.) I don't know what's wrong with me, I clearly need some help.

And those are seven very pathetic things about me. That was a lot harder than I thought it would be.

I tag: Jen at LordsoftheManor ∙ Jenna at Cranberry Corner ∙ Cheri at Crane-ium ∙ Mike at Happy Gilmores ∙ Linda at I Knew I Could Fly ∙ Mark at Mo' Boy Blog ∙ Luisa at Novembrance.

We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year! Sing if you like.

Monday, December 24, 2007

Carbonite: Online Backup -- Wahoo!

All right, I'll admit it. I've lost a lot of data due to hard drive crashes before. In fact, I have one hard drive out there I'm still trying to get data off of . . . important data, and until I have a thousand dollars it isn't going to happen. So you can imagine when I heard Glenn Beck and Rush Limbaugh talking about Carbonite.com I kept thinking I had to check it out. It only took me a couple of three months to transfer that thought from the truck and the radio where I was listening, to the actual computer.

I signed up for the free trial, did my computer backup and am ecstatically happy at the thought of never losing anything again. Carbonite rocks! I'm so happy!

I'm not kidding. I only had to set it up once and now it just automatically updates any file I alter or adds anything new I create.

So to all my friends in Blogland . . . here's the kicker! It only costs $49.95 a year for this online storage.

From Carbonite.com I pulled this information:
Simple. Installation is a snap. Carbonite’s online backup service starts automatically and works quietly and continuously in the background protecting your data. If you’ve accidentally erased something, don’t worry; we’ve still got a copy. You can restore deleted files with just a few clicks on your PC. If your PC crashes, just visit our website to recover lost files.

Safe. Your data is stored safely at our secure remote backup centers. No one can see your data but you because your files are encrypted before they leave your computer. We use the same encryption techniques that most banks and e-payment sites do.

Always On. Carbonite online backup software is always looking for new data on your PC. The moment you add or modify files, Carbonite swings into action to back up your data. Whenever your PC is connected to the Internet (at home, the office, a hotel or airport…) Carbonite is working to keep your data safe. And it will never slow down your PC or Internet connection.
So all my pictures, all my music, all my work, all my manuscripts, all my screenplays, my journals, my records, my genealogy and family history etc . . . never to be lost again! Check out Carbonite by Clicking Here, I'm pretty sure you'll be glad you did! Merry Christmas to us!

Oh yeah, you can click on the picture too and I'll be keeping this as a permanent link in my right-hand column.

By the way, check out my new voice blog, also found in the right-hand column. I'll be recording messages every so often -- today I recorded a post I'd written for LDSBlogs.com called You Stand Not Alone. I felt it appropriate for this season. Check it out and let me know what you think.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Happy Birthday Joseph Smith

Today is Joseph Smith's Birthday. 202 years ago, on December 23, 1805 he was born into this world, foreordained to be the prophet of the restoration.

I wrote this about him on LDSBlogs.com a couple of days ago and wanted to share it with you today:

Steady and Steadfast

In reflecting how many would come and go in the kingdom of God, Joseph would often say, "Brethren I have not apostatized yet, and don’t feel like doing so." He called on the Lord, night and day, so that he could remain steadfast in his calling as the prophet of the restoration and accomplish the purposes for which he'd been born.

The thing about Joseph Smith, Jr. that continually amazes me to this day, is a basic character trait that is invaluable and yet found in so few people. For two years of my life, six days a week, 12 to 15 hours a day I studied the life, times and teachings of the prophet, Joseph Smith. I studied his life, from birth to death. I studied the history of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, commonly known as the Mormon Church. I studied the history of the day: political, historical, socio-economic, arts and literature, religious, social . . . all of it. I carefully plotted each event of the prophet's life and looked at the history surrounding him and through this intensive study I came to understand more fully what drove him and why. And in the process of that extensive study, I also gained a strong and unassailable testimony of him as a prophet of God. He never gave up. He never stopped. He never retreated. He stood strong in his testimony of Jesus Christ and Heavenly Father and all that was revealed to him. No person, no matter how cruel or traitorous, was able to stay him from his course.

He was a prophet of God, so called by our Lord God Jesus Christ. On that spring morning, he entered a quiet grove and prayed with a pure and simple heart and from that day forward, no matter what was done to him: multiple tarring and featherings, trumped up charges and court hearings, unlawful imprisonment, the persecution and outright lawlessness in the conduct toward the Saints and never, no matter what was done to him, would he deny, could he deny, what he'd seen and what calling had been extended to him by God.

One night, when his twin son and daughter were ill with the measles, he was up walking with his infant son trying to soothe him. The door burst open and vicious, heartless men tumbled inside, each trying to get to the prophet first. Wrenching the child from his arms, they threw the baby at Emma and dragged Joseph, fighting every inch of the way, from the house and out into a pasture. There they poured boiling hot tar over him, searing him straight through to the bone. Drunken and laughing, they then poured feathers over him. They tried to force poison down his throat, chipping a tooth in the process. Joseph was a big, strong, athletic man, but even he could not withstand a mob. Yet, they were not able to force the poison down his throat and this saved his life. They finally left him, nearly unconscious and writhing in agony, and stumbled to their homes and tucked themselves into bed, never stopping to consider the consequences of their actions, both mortal and eternal.

Hours later, searchers found Joseph and carried him home. Through the night they painstakingly peeled the tar from his body, taking layer upon painful layer of skin with every strip. By morning, having survived an excruciatingly painful and exhausting night, Joseph arose and went into town to preach. It was Sunday morning and he had a message to share. A message of repentance, strength, hope and eternal love. And preach he did, strengthened by the Lord that he might do so.

One might think, after a night such as this when he was tortured, his wife and children terrified beyond belief, that he would walk away and say, "Enough is enough." But he did not. He continued to preach of Jesus Christ. He continued to preach of Heavenly Father. And in the congregation that day were some of the members of the mob whose hearts were softened, pierced with shame and sorrow. This man they had treated so viciously and inhumanely the night before, now stood in all humility testifying of forgiveness and the healing power it holds.

One might think as he buried his infant son, dead because of the exposure to the chill midnight air in his weakened condition and the cruel actions of a merciless mob, that Joseph would walk away and say, "I cannot do this anymore." He did.

One might say, as he was hauled into court after court, suffering an extended unlawful imprisonment in the Richmond and Liberty Jails, he might do more than petition God, rather that he might say, "I will deny I saw and spoke to God." He did not deny, he stayed the course.

The moment when he finally broke down and cried to God, was when the saints (Mormons) were being raped, murdered and driven from their homes and across the frozen Mississippi with scarcely more than the clothes on their backs. When cruel and careless men slaughtered the Mormons at Hauns Mill, even the children, saying coldly, "Nit make lice," before fighting the bullets in everyone around, young and old. When lawlessness ruled the land, mercy's hand was stand and justice stood mute . . . that is when Joseph finally cried to God.

O God, where art thou? And where is the pavilion that covereth thy hiding place?

How long shall thy hand be stayed, and thine eye, yea thy pure eye, behold from the eternal heavens the wrongs of thy people and of thy servants, and thine ear be penetrated with their cries?

Yea, O Lord, how long shall they suffer these wrongs and unlawful oppressions, before thine heart shall be softened toward them, and thy bowels be moved with compassion toward them?

O Lord God Almighty, maker of heaven, earth, and seas, and of all things that in them are, and who controllest and subjectest the devil, and the dark and benighted dominion of Sheol—stretch forth thy hand; let thine eye pierce; let thy pavilion be taken up; let thy hiding place no longer be covered; let thine ear be inclined; let thine heart be softened, and thy bowels moved with compassion toward us. (D&C 121:1-4)

Through all of this and more, for the remainder of his life, Joseph would not deny the First Vision. He would not deny he was called by Jesus Christ and Heavenly Father to restore the gospel to the face of the earth. He would not walk away from his prophetic calling, no matter the cost.

And now, his name is bandied about, both for good and evil, in this day. And still, he would stand and shout to the world. Jesus Christ lives. Heavenly Father lives. They love us and Christ's gospel, with all its promise, hope and reward is fully restored on the earth today. Come home . . . come be at peace . . . come and remember who you are.

I will close this post with the words of Joseph Smith, Jr. himself:

The Prophet’s journal for November 6, 1835, records:

“I was this morning introduced to a man from the east. After hearing my name, he remarked that I was nothing but a man, indicating by this expression, that he had supposed that a person to whom the Lord should see fit to reveal His will, must be something more than a man. He seemed to have forgotten the saying that fell from the lips of St. James, that [Elijah] was a man subject to like passions as we are, yet he had such power with God, that He, in answer to his prayers, shut the heavens that they gave no rain for the space of three years and six months; and again, in answer to his prayer, the heavens gave forth rain, and the earth gave forth fruit [see James 5:17–18]. Indeed, such is the darkness and ignorance of this generation, that they look upon it as incredible that a man should have any [dealings] with his Maker.” (History of the Church, 2:302; from a Joseph Smith journal entry, Nov. 6, 1835, Kirtland, Ohio.)

“When did I ever teach anything wrong from this stand? When was I ever confounded? I want to triumph in Israel before I depart hence and am no more seen. I never told you I was perfect; but there is no error in the revelations which I have taught. Must I, then, be thrown away as a thing of naught?” (History of the Church, 6:366; from a discourse given by Joseph Smith on May 12, 1844, in Nauvoo, Illinois; reported by Thomas Bullock.)

“Although I do wrong, I do not the wrongs that I am charged with doing: the wrong that I do is through the frailty of human nature, like other men. No man lives without fault. Do you think that even Jesus, if He were here, would be without fault in your eyes? His enemies said all manner of evil against Him—they all watched for iniquity in Him.”(History of the Church, 5:140; from a discourse given by Joseph Smith on Aug. 31, 1842, in Nauvoo, Illinois; reported by Eliza R. Snow.)

Joseph Smith’s journal for October 29, 1842, records: “I … went over to the store [in Nauvoo, Illinois], where a number of brethren and sisters were assembled, who had arrived this morning from the neighborhood of New York. … I told them I was but a man, and they must not expect me to be perfect; if they expected perfection from me, I should expect it from them; but if they would bear with my infirmities and the infirmities of the brethren, I would likewise bear with their infirmities.” (History of the Church, 5:181; paragraph divisions altered; from a Joseph Smith journal entry, Oct. 29, 1842, Nauvoo, Illinois.)

Happy Birthday, Joseph. Thank you for your sacrifices.

Copyright by More Good Foundation ∙ December 2007

Saturday, December 22, 2007

You Have to be Mormon to Fully Understand - But Enjoy!


I received this in an email and laughed so hard I had to share! I can't claim credit, but man I think its hysterical!


If Mitt Romney were elected, what Ward would POTUS be in?

If you are his new Bishop, here are your top 10 questions:

1. Will you allow an inaugural ball to be held in the cultural hall? Do you mount security cameras on top of each basketball rim and have a secret service detail stationed on the stage?

2. Can you call Mitt and Ann as the Nursery leaders... even if you really feel inspired?

3. Who is going to home teach them? Will you call someone who needs activation but may not pass the vetting and national security screening?

4. If Harry Reid and Mitt Romney are in the same High Priest group, will you need to be there to keep order?

5. Exactly how will tithing settlement work? Will the Secretary of the Treasury come too?

6. Will you be inviting the new Romney family to speak in Sacrament Meeting... and if they go a little over at what point do you ask them to sit down?

7. Will the Secret Service do a sweep of the building before each meeting? And if the Romney's always leave before Sunday School, will the Sunday School president need to interview them? If they stay, where will you hold the class?

8. Can you call the Secret Service agents to help out in Primary?

9. If you give Mitt a calling and the two Democrats in the Ward raise their hand AGAINST sustaining him - partly out of habit - does the Supreme Court need to be involved?

10. If you can't give them a calling (job), and they don't attend very often (for presidential stuff) will that mean they're 'inactive?' If they're not active, can you give them a Temple Recommend? And if you do, can they go? Will the Secret Service have to screen the temple too?

11. If the President wants to hold Sacrament Meeting at Camp David or the White House for security reasons, is that a conflict of Church and State?

If you're assigned to be the Romney's home teacher:

1. Can you just drop by, no appointment?

2. Can you even call them for an appointment or do you have to go through the Chief of Staff?

3. Can you bring by Christmas sweets and cookies? Will they be analyzed? And for how many people - family, secret service details?

4. If you don't come can the IRS do an audit on you?

5. Will they want to do a national security background check?

6. Do you have to have a permanent companion who has been vetted? Can you just grab any teacher or priest to come with you? And what if that priest has been a little wayward? Do you need to search him first?

7. Do you have to help him move in and out of the White House?

8. If Ann Romney gets sick, are you allowed to bring in meals or at least tell the Relief Society about it?

9. What can you share with the Bishop about the Romneys?

10. Do you have to ask them about their year's supply?

11. If you get a late night call for a blessing will reporters follow you around wanting to know what was wrong and what you said?

If Mitt Romney is assigned to be YOUR home teacher,

1. Is telling the group leader you haven't been home taught a national security breech?

2. If he wants to come at the end of the month, do you accept his reason, "I've been out of town?"

3. Will he drop by unannounced or will the media crews give him away?


Okay, I know that's a little irreverent -- but come on, that was funny. Wasn't it?

Friday, December 21, 2007

It's Called Christmas With a Capital "C"



Gotta love it! I do!

Work, babysitting and Christmas parties are severely cramping my time today. So this is all I have time for.

Interesting political note: Tom Tancredo dropped out of the presidential race and endorsed Mitt Romney. "Tancredo said he was impressed with Romney’s ability to solve complex problems and described him as a man of “personal integrity and great character.”"

On LDSblogs.com:

Joseph Smith: Steadfast and Steady
Wars and Rumors of Wars
Mormon Articles of Faith: We Believe . . . Part 3
Brigham Young Testifies of Joseph Smith
Thomas S. Monson: Mormon Apostle, Veteran and Businessman

Thursday, December 20, 2007

Pause for Politics - Glenn Beck Interview Mitt Romney

From Glenn Beck's website I copied the entire transcript of this interview:

Glenn Beck Interview with Governor Mitt Romney

DECEMBER 19, 2007
GLENN BECK PROGRAM

BEGIN TRANSCRIPT

GLENN: It's our last broadcast before the holiday and I'm pleased to be joined with Governor Mitt Romney. Hello, Mitt, how are you, sir?

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: I'm terrific, Glenn, good to be with you.

GLENN: You know, I told you this in person. I went down to your speech and saw you in Texas give the speech on faith but it's one of the best speeches I've ever heard and it was just, it was amazing and I've heard this from several people and this is the way I feel. It was a turning point for me in my support for you. I was amazed. I was amazed. Great speech.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Well, you're very kind. I thought it was an important topic to talk about because this is a country which has been built upon a foundation of faith and I know there are some who want to remove that foundation and I'm not one of them.

GLENN: I want to talk to you a little bit about the Huckabee surge here because I don't understand it. I like Governor Huckabee. He's a nice man, he's a kind man. However I, you know, I've got my differences with him. I was with him, what, a week ago in the airport and we spent about 25 minutes together and we had a very frank conversation about some of the things that he has said in a whisper campaign and he said to me that he felt you were picking on him and he felt that he was under attack by you on some of the ads that you're running now where you're pointing out the differences. He thought that was just an attack on him. Do you have any comment on some of the ads that you're running?

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Well, actually what I described, I don't think he's disagreed with them at all, is what his positions are on key issues, and I think, you know, when you have a surge, you earn the opportunity for people to take a look at your record and your positions, and I've not attacked him personally. I actually began the ads by talking about our places of agreement and, you know, Mike Huckabee's a friend, but there are places where we disagree. He granted 1,033 pardons and commutations including 12 for convicted murderers. I granted no pardons or commutations. That's a difference. Now, he calls that an attack on him. I just call it the truth of his record. And given the fact he granted those pardons, he can explain why and if people agree with him, they can vote for him. If they think, no, I don't want someone who would grant 1,033 pardons in his term as governor, then they can vote for me. But it's certainly not an attack to compare and contrast issues and records. Now, you will see attacks if people go after individuals on a personal basis and impugn their character or their integrity or try and suggest that they are a bad person. That has happened in campaigns but at this stage in my campaign, all we're showing is places of difference on key issues and frankly issues matter and Governor Huckabee has merited the chance to be inspected closely on where he stands on issues.

GLENN: Let me ask you this question because this is my problem with Mike Huckabee is I think -- and God love him, but I think that sometimes people get so close to the gospel that they misunderstand nowhere in the gospel does Jesus say, "You know, and the Government should go heal that person." It's always the individual. And I think Mike Huckabee got lost on the pardons because of compassion and trying to be more Christ-like, et cetera, et cetera, but it doesn't mean that you get forgetful on what people have done in their past. People can change but there's still punishment and on our side learn, you know, from the lessons that this person has showed us in the past. But it's the same kind of concern, quite honestly, Mitt, that I have about you. You are a very compassionate guy and you are very close. You live your faith. However, sometimes when people do that they think, well, maybe I should have government kind of help out a little bit more. Can you reassure anybody that you're not a Rockefeller Republican, that you don't believe -- that you believe compassion starts at home and not in Washington, D.C.?

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Well, of course, we're a compassionate people and we do compassionate things around the world but at the same time the responsibility of our nation rests with the individual and with the family. And if you think about what it is that's made us the nation that we are, it is the personal responsibility and the individual incentives which are associated with our free enterprise system and the freedoms we enjoy. Now, does that mean that government has no role? Of course not. Government does have a role. But you can see what happens to a major part of our economy when the government starts playing too big of a role and that's happened in healthcare.

With the creep of growing Medicaid expansions and with Medicare taking this large portion of the healthcare system, you find that government is beginning to really drive the whole healthcare system. And I look at healthcare and say we've got to get government out of healthcare and let personal responsibility once again reign and let the free market do the work that it's always done and the rest of our economy. So you look at my record, you'll see a guy who believes in keeping government small.

Give you an example. There were fewer state workers in Massachusetts after I left as governor than when I came in. And by the way, I increased the number of state police dramatically, but the other workers, I significantly reduced and overall I reduced the number of workers. In Governor Huckabee's case, he added thousands upon thousands of new state workers. He took spending from $6.7 billion to over $16 billion. So, you know, very different records, very different approach and you can see where I stand if you look at my record.

GLENN: Talk to me a little bit about the bunker mentality that -- because I don't even know what it means. I'm looking at Huckabee's statement.

Stu, do you have that statement from him? Do you have that handy? He made some statement, you know, that the United States needs the rest of the world to know that we're not enemies, we're in it together and the arrogant bunker mentality of this administration. I mean, I don't even know what that means. What is that policy?

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: I think that kind of an attack on the President -- and that is a personal attack. . . you see, there's the difference between somebody who's talking about differences on issues, and we can argue about whether or not the President was effective in the way he managed the war, and I think he made a number of errors, but you go from talking about issues and policy to making personal attacks when you call someone arrogant and bunker mentality. And that's where I think Governor Huckabee made another error and owes the President an apology. The suggestion that somehow our challenges in Iraq are due to a President that's arrogant with a bunker mentality, that's just simply plain and wrong. This President has worked tirelessly to keep us safe and he's done so and he's done his best for America. Has he made mistakes? Absolutely. Will anyone make mistakes? Yeah, that's true as well. But to accuse the President of an arrogant bunker mentality is simply wrong. He has been open to -- well, for instance, General Petraeus' entirely new perspective of taking the troop surge, he fought for that against almost everybody. Arguing was the wrong way to go on the Democratic side. They were claiming that the war had been lost, and the President's right. The surge is working.

GLENN: Give me your thought on Petraeus not being Time magazine's man of the year but instead Vladimir Putin.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Oh, you are kidding. Did they put Vladimir Putin on the cover?

GLENN: Yeah, Time magazine.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: That really, that's disgusting. I'm absolutely -- I mean, are you -- I mean, I haven't seen Time. Are you serious?

GLENN: No, I'm serious. It is Vladimir Putin, Time magazine man of the year. A guy who, you know, with all of the KGB stuff in the past, Time magazine says has transformed the country and congratulations. Time magazine man of the year, Vladimir Putin.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Well, you know, he imprisoned his political opponents. There have been a number of highly suspicious murders. He has squelched public dissent and free press. And to suggest that someone like that is the man of the year is really disgusting. I'm just appalled. Clearly General Petraeus is the person or one of a few people who would certainly merit that designation and I know Time magazine makes a distinction. They say, well, people who had an impact, whether it's good or bad, is the man of the year. I think that's a --

GLENN: No, no, hang on.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: -- a false --

GLENN: Before you go too far down this road -- wait a minute. Before you go down this road, this is the quote why he's the man of the year, "For bringing stability and renewed... what was it, impact? Status. Renewed status to his country. That's why.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Isn't that something. So a good dictator -- I guess Raul Castro will get it next. A good dictator that imprisons or murders political and media opponents and therefore brings stability, I mean, there's nothing like the stability that martial law provides or dictatorship provides. I find it a truly appalling designation.

GLENN: And the stability that he's bringing to the Middle East with the transfer of this last few days of nuclear technology to Iran.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Yeah. I mean, he's once again supplying nuclear material to the Bushehr power plant and it's another example of Russia trying to destabilize the world, destabilize the Middle East. It does tell you something about Time magazine. I'm really -- I must admit I'm really disappointed. That's a real shock.

GLENN: I was --

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Our mainstream media I think has just showed its hand.

GLENN: We've talked off the ear a bit about the economy last time you did the TV show, I asked you to spend a couple of minutes and talk about the economy and I think it is now starting to show. I've been saying this for a while, "Guys, we cannot live like this; we are in real trouble here with out-of-control spending and people who just don't care. They will make money any way they can and dopes in the country that will just look and take any loan because they can pay it today; don't worry about tomorrow." We're in real trouble. It's starting to show its ugly face and yet yesterday it was passed -- a $3 trillion budget was passed. $11,000 earmarks. The President signs it. $700 million for one bike path and yet they defunded the war and defunded the border fence.

President Romney, you would do what?

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Well, this is an opportunity for veto and, of course, it's an opportunity for letting congress know exactly what would be vetoed beforehand and working closely enough with people across the aisle to make sure that they understand what's going to be vetoed and then taking that to the American people beforehand. So they can say whether they agree or they disagree with the President and they can communicate with their legislative leadership, what they think about the issue and then those senators or congressmen who vote against the President, recognize that they're going to be taking some slings and arrows back home. You've got to make sure that the people stand with you on an issue like this, get their support and that support will cause congress to feel a lot of heat and if they feel the heat, they will see the light. We're going to have to make this a public debate.

GLENN: I don't know a single person, I don't know a soul, Republican or Democrat, that would say, oh, $700 million bike path? That sounds like a smart move. I mean, I don't know a soul that would be for this. The American people are smarter than this. They know what these earmarks are about. So what are we missing?

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: You know, it's going to take a real campaign to the public and to smoke people out one by one and to have the President say this is unacceptable, this is unacceptable, here's why I'm vetoing it. You know, it's going to take a real effort to stop what is a long practice of congress, Republican and Democrat alike to keep on getting pork projects for their home district and then using that as an excuse to get reelected. We're going to have to have people around this country say I will not participate in that, I'm going to vote somebody out who voted for this kind of pork barrel spending.

GLENN: I know we're out of time. Do I have two minutes with you?

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Sure.

GLENN: I want to play this ad. Do you have that, Dan? I want to play this ad. This is one of the more amazing ads I have seen. Go ahead and play the Romney ad, please, Dan. Does he have it?

STU: Yes, hold on.

VOICE: My daughter disappeared in New York City for three days. No one could find her. My business manager took charge. He closed the company and brought almost all of our employees to New York. He said, I don't care how long it takes, we're going to find her. He set up a command center and searched through the night. The man who helped save my daughter was Mitt Romney. Mitt's done a lot of things that people say are nearly impossible but for me the most important thing he's ever done is to help save my daughter.

VOICE: I'm Mitt Romney and I approved this message.

GLENN: You closed your business and moved all your employees down -- sent all of your employees down to do a search for this employee's daughter here in New York?

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Well, you would do the same thing, Glenn. You know, one of my friends and a colleague in my firm came to me and mentioned that his daughter had been missing for a few days in New York City and the police had been unable to find her and, of course, he was very, very concerned and I closed our firm and asked all of our people to come to New York and we set up a command center, we organized the city in a grid. We also got our suppliers in New York, our law firm, our printing firm and a drugstore chain that we happened to have an investment in at the time and have them work together with us to search the city, to print flyers, to put them in people's shopping bags with pictures of the young woman and we were fortunate that we got a lot of media coverage by virtue of all of us coming down there.

GLENN: How long did this last?

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Well, it didn't last terribly long. It was about, probably about 24 hours when we got a call from someone saying, is there a reward. And then the person hung up. And we were tracing calls and we sent police to the home and we were able to find her there.

GLENN: Holy cow.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: So we're -- you know, we're very fortunate that we were able to have such an impact and the media was able to play such an important role in getting that message across, 800 numbers, reward requests, so forth. And we were able to find her.

GLENN: Well, I'm just trying to think of the mainstream media question to ask you after that. Maybe did you make him take vacation days for those days that he went down and looked for his daughter? I mean, I guess -- I don't know how to spin that into a bad question, but somebody will find a way.

Mitt, thank you very much.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Hey, thanks, Glenn, good to be with you.

GLENN: Merry Christmas, sir.

GOVERNOR ROMNEY: Merry Christmas to you. Bye-bye.

END TRANSCRIPT

And so I don't get in trouble for posting the interview in its entirety, here are the books that Glenn has out on the market right now. Great books, really, yes . . . they're on my wish list. Not just a shameless plug to keep my butt out of hot water.


Wednesday, December 19, 2007

Little Drummer Boy

This rendition of Little Drummer Boy always brings a smile to my face and warmth to my heart. Enjoy.



I wonder, can it be so difficult to be as the Little Drummer Boy? Yes, he's a fictional character but let's stop and think about it for a moment.

He heard of the newborn King come to save the world, not through battles, but to save our souls by paying for our sins, sorrow, griefs and illnesses, all that pains us, in that quiet garden so long ago.

He pushed, he suffered and he persevered and the moment finally came when he could play his small drum for the God of all the world.

And what do we do to find Jesus Christ? Do we study the scriptures He's given us in order to emulate Him better? Do we venture into His church buildings to worship, be edified and instructed and to partake of the sacrament in remembrance of Him? Do we eschew the things of the world, as in:
  • Trampling on others to get ahead
  • Treating our loved ones and others with disrespect and anger instead of love and support
  • Buying that wonderful new couch instead of paying our tithes
  • Spinning as whirling dervishes never seeing the beauty of the world God created for us
  • Accumulating gold, jewels, riches, cars, mansions, properties, islands, nations . . . never stopping, never pausing in our pursuit of riches to stop, look around and say -- "I have been given much, how may I give back?"
These are just a few things that come to mind. But maybe the message of the Little Drummer Boy is deeper than thirty minutes of entertainment or three minutes of a song. I think I'll pause and reflect over the last few years and remember what I am grateful for:
  • The gospel of Jesus Christ in my life.
  • The knowledge I have of my Savior and my Heavenly Father of how much they love me.
  • My sweet, marvelous husband whom I love and adore is still with me despite the many physical challenges and illnesses we have faced.
  • I have the most wonderful family whom I love and adore.
  • I have the BEST friends in the entire world, and yes, I speak of my Blogland friends too.
  • I step out my door every day, look to my left and there are the snow-capped majestic mountains God created for me to enjoy every day, oh and I do.
  • For the beauty of the Christmas trees, their twinkling lights symbolic of that new star which announced the birth of the Son of God into the world.
  • For the love and peace that abounds each time this year.
  • For a roof over my head, food in my cupboards and a warm bed every night.
  • For the internet, where I can interact with friends AND share the gospel of Jesus Christ with the stroke of a key.
I could go on and on, but it isn't really necessary. I think I'll take the Little Drummer Boy and his message to heart this year . . . no matter what it takes, get to Jesus Christ.

Christmas is a little slim for us this year and I have been somewhat saddened by this, juvenile as it may seem. I've struggled to remember what Christmas is about, to not dread my husband's transplant coming up; to not fear the medical bankruptcy finishing on the last day of this year; to not anticipate all the things which need to be fixed in our home and our vehicles and to stop, breathe and remember . . . it just doesn't matter.

We have hope. We have life. We have beauty all around us. We have family and friends. We have love coming to us from every corner of the world. We have the gospel . . . really, we have so much to be grateful for.

And so this morning, as I write, Christmas carols fills the air, the trees are lit with light, my husband is snoring in the other room and I'm grateful, so grateful, for this quiet snapshot in time. Life is good . . . Merry Christmas!

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Ben Stein on Christmas

I received an email a few days ago with Ben Stein's comments on this time of year and the Christian celebration of the birth of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. I just heard the man say on Neil Cavuto's show that these are indeed his words and he stands by every one of them:

Herewith at this happy time of year, a few confessions from my beating heart:

I have no freaking clue who Nick and Jessica are. I see them on the cover of People and Us constantly when I am buying my dog biscuits and kitty litter. I often ask the checkers at the grocery stores. They never know who Nick and Jessica are either. Who are they? Will it change my life if I know who they are and why they have broken up? Why are they so important? I don't know who Lindsay Lohan is, either, and I do not care at all about Tom Cruise's wife.

Am I going to be called before a Senate committee and asked if I am a subversive? Maybe, but I just have no clue who Nick and Jessica are. Is this what it means to be no longer young. It's not so bad.

Next confession: I am a Jew, and every single one of my ancestors was Jewish. And it does not bother me even a little bit when people call those beautiful lit up, bejeweled trees Christmas trees. I don't feel threatened. I don't feel discriminated against. That's what they are: Christmas trees. It doesn't bother me a bit when people say, "Merry Christmas" to me. I don't think they are slighting me or getting ready to put me in a ghetto. In fact, I kind of like it. It shows that we are all brothers and sisters celebrating this happy time of year. It doesn't bother me at all that there is a manger scene on display at a key intersection near my beach house in Malibu. If people want a creche, it's just as fine with me as is the Menorah a few hundred yards away.

I don't like getting pushed around for being a Jew and I don't think Christians like getting pushed around for being Christians. I think people who believe in God are sick and tired of getting pushed around, period. I have no idea where the concept came from that America is an explicitly atheist country. I can't find it in the Constitution and I don't like it being shoved down my throat.

Or maybe I can put it another way: where did the idea come from that we should worship Nick and Jessica and we aren't allowed to worship God as we understand Him?

I guess that's a sign that I'm getting old, too. But there are a lot of us who are wondering where Nick and Jessica came from and where the America we knew went to.

He has a point, several salient ones as a matter of fact. Neil Cavuto went on to say that people are shopping more at stores with Christmas decorations and say Merry Christmas rather than the ones that say Happy Holidays. Isn't that interesting?

I conduct an experiment every year. I say Merry Christmas to everyone I meet all during the season. I try to take note of those who say it back to me. So far . . . since December 1st, only two and neither of those were at the businesses I frequent. This saddens me so deeply.

Jesus Christ, the Redeemer and Savior of mankind was born 2007 years ago. Whether it was in December or April, it really doesn't matter. We, as Americans, and all Christians around the world, celebrate this holy night on December 25th. May I share a little of what Christmas means to me?

The birth of our Savior shows me that I have a loving Father in Heaven who loves ALL His children so much, He sent His only Begotten Son to teach the gospel, pay for the sins of the world, break the bands of death and redeem the world.

The birth of our Savior shows me that I have a loving Savior and Redeemer in my Lord God Jesus Christ.

The birth of our Savior shows me that I matter.

The birth of our Savior established the eternal chain of family, from Adam and Eve to the last child born on this earth, whomever and whenever that may be.

The birth of our Savior gives us hope, joy and peace which permeates to the very center of my soul.

Why wouldn't I celebrate the birth of the Son of God who descended from His heavenly throne in order to "bring to pass the immortality and eternal life of man." (Moses 1:39, Pearl of Great Price)

Today on LDSBlogs.com:

We Stand Not Alone
Saviors on Mount Zion
John A. Widtsoe: Mormon Apostle and Scientist
Orson F. Whitney: Mormon Apostle, Poet and Historian