Archive for March 5, 2011
As enacted by God states: “Have you not read that He who made them at the beginning ‘made them male and female,’ and said, ‘For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and the two shall become one flesh’?” ( Matthew 19:4-5).
As enacted by the United States Congress in 1996 defines marriage as a legal union between one man and one woman for purposes of all federal laws, and provides that states need not recognize a marriage from another state if it is between persons of the same sex.
This past month Obama decided not to defend the Defense of Marriage Act instituted by God and echoed by the United States Congress.
Apparently Obama seems to think he is big enough to oppose God? I don’t know about you but I know whose side I am going to defend. God’s side.
Standing ready for a fight. Eagle out.
I chose to share this link because I feel that America needs to get a behind the Mosque education as to what the Muslim Clerics actually believe and teach. This site promotes the demolition of the Statue of Liberty to be replaced with a Muslim minaret. http://shariah4america.com/NewYork/The-Islamic-Demolition-of-the-Statue-of-Liberty
Watch the Fox News interview of Anjem Choudary and hear it from the horses mouth. Or perhaps the camels mouth?
The first one-third of Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand’s epic novel portraying the battle between wealth creators and the looters who sick the government on them, has been made into a movie, and it opens appropriately on tax day.
The film covers the first third of Rand’s novel, the triumphant story of building the “John Galt Line”—followed by a wave of government edicts that saddle the Line with impossible burdens, making the triumph a battle won in a losing war between producers and looters, and setting the stage for the later battles of Parts II and III. The film pulls no punches in this regard: Rand’s theme of makers vs. takers comes through loud and clear in scenes like the one in which Rearden is forced to sell off his satellite companies. Bowler captures the agony of a man having his life’s work torn from him. …
The novel was set in an indefinite “day after tomorrow,” a world that is always just ahead of us, retreating like the horizon as we approach. The producers made the controversial decision to date the story in late 2016, presumably to tap into the many parallels to current events, and the establishing shots of cities, train wrecks, and government actions are arresting extrapolations of today’s actual world. These depressing scenes are offset by gorgeous scenes of triumph. The first run of the John Galt Line is a visual symphony (even with some ragged edges in the digital graphics).
You read the book now see the movie, or see the movie then read the book either way this is a must see!



