By Pat Boone Posted: August 01, 2009 1:00 am Eastern © 2009 I got an e-mail from President Obama today. It had a heading at the top: THE WHITE HOUSE Washington I must admit, I had – and still have – mixed feelings about it. Anytime you get a "personal" letter or e-mail from the president of the United States, it naturally seems important. But since it was obviously a form letter, sent to several million other American voters, you quickly realize that the man whose name is at the end of the letter doesn't know you at all. He couldn't pick you out of a crowd of two. It's a political ploy, only special in the sense that only modern technology makes this kind of mass (though "personal" seeming) communication possible. It starts out "Dear Friend," and it's signed simply "Barack Obama." I really doubt that Mr. Obama even saw or approved the letter, much less composed it. It was conceived and implemented by his team, very much the same technique he used seeking votes on the Internet. Nice, friendly, bullet-pointed – and completely, almost desperately, political. Its clear purpose was to convince me to personally support his health care plan, and even "put these core principles of reform in the hands of your friends, your family, and the rest of your social network." This is one of the main ways he got elected, through slick use of the Internet, getting ordinary citizens to literally go to work for him and to campaign for him and his agenda. Teddy Roosevelt could never have done this and even George Bush and his folks never thought of it. Slick as a whistle and maybe effective. "Speechless: Silencing the Christians," by Don Wildmon, lays out determined strategy of coalition of liberal secularists, homosexual activists and Fortune 500 companies But what was he trying to sell me? He said, "It's time to fix our unsustainable insurance system and create a new foundation for health care security," and then proposed to provide eight specific consumer protections. They sound good and reasonable on the surface. But I'd been studying up on his health care proposal, and had just read at least 50 ways his plan could never work. It would actually devastate our economy and change the fundamental relationship between citizens and government. We'd no longer be freeborn citizens who have a consensual government; our very physical bodies would be the wards of the state. So it left a bad taste in my mouth. It vividly brought to mind the Genesis 25 story of Jacob and Esau, sons of Isaac and grandsons of Abraham. Esau was a rugged outdoors guy who loved to hunt and fish, and cook and eat what he killed. His brother Jacob was more a "stay around home" guy, a "mild man, dwelling in tents." He could well afford to take it easy, because Papa Isaac was wealthy. And Jacob's mama was happy to do all the cooking for him. She even taught him how to cook some himself. One day, while Jacob was practicing his cooking, brother Esau came in from the field, dog-tired. "Hey bro," he asked, "Gimme some of that stew. It smells good, and I'm worn out and hungry." Well, Jacob was something of a conniver, and he saw a chance to make a big, big score. "I'll serve you up some of this delicious stew, my brother — if you'll sell me your birthright, as of this day." According to the Bible account, Esau didn't even think it over. "Hey, I'm so hungry I could die, and then what good would my ‘birthright' be? You got yourself a deal, little brother. Pass me the stew." So in that moment of temporary need, he gave up his future and all his father intended him to have. He ate a big meal, filled his belly, and went his way. He didn't realize till later what a complete fool he'd been – and he "cried with an exceedingly great and bitter cry." As the Bible says, "he despised his birthright." [CONTINUE READING]
Sunday, August 02, 2009
Selling America's birthright ~ By Pat Boone
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