Friday, November 9, 2007

THE USA REVIVAL - A Day of Thanksgiving for Our State and Nation


Jackson, Ms. (November 9, 2007) -- A very special Thanksgiving program has been planned for Tuesday, November 20, 2007, at the MISSISSIPPI AGRICULTURE AND FORESTRY MUSEUM on Lakeland Drive in Jackson. The gates will open at 3:30 pm and the service begins at 5:00 pm. Admission is FREE!

"This event is simply people coming together to give thanks to God for our state, our country, our governmental leaders and the Blessings which God has poured over our land," Paul Ott, organizer and host of the event, said. “There is no commercialism in this event, and almost everything has been donated by individuals sharing a desire to peacefully assemble and recognize that we are a great nation dependent on great leaders and an even greater God," Ott continued. "The Bible gives us instruction to "give thanks to the Lord, for He is good". That is the essence of this event."

Those who have committed to come speak and pray and are on the agenda are: Dr. John Cameron (Greater Mt. Calvary Baptist Church), Rev. Larry LeBlanc (Sr. Pastor of FBC Summit Mississippi), Tom Lester (from Green Acres television show), Paul Ott (Listen to the Eagle), Dr. Dolphus Weary (Mission Mississippi), Dr. Jerry Young (President, Mississippi Baptist Convention and 1ST Vice-President of the National Baptist Convention), and a great handful of talented musicians to perform, including award winning members of the Greater Mt. Calvary Church Choir, part of the Mississippi Mass Choir. Shuttle transportation will be provided from the parking lots to the staging area for those who need special assistance. Attendees are asked to bring lawn chairs and/or blankets. In the event of bad weather, the event will be moved inside the Ag Museum Auditorium. Special seating will be available for those attending with special needs.

There will be representatives from ALL Christian denominations present at the event and the closing ceremony will include a candlelight prayer, while master violinist Mickey Davis, formally of the Mississippi Symphony Orchestra, plays “Nearer My God To Thee.” ALL participants and attendees will then join in a rousing chorus of GOD BLESS AMERICA!

For more information visit our website www.theUSArevival.com.

Saturday, November 3, 2007

Mississippi governor assailed for taking casino cash

www.onenewsnow.com just reported that Governor Barbour has received $25,000 from state casinos and more than $200,000 from outside gambling interests.

Key Quotes:

The re-election campaign of Mississippi Governor Haley Barbour, whose name is being floated as a possible Republican vice-president nominee, has directly received $25,000 from state casinos and more than $200,000 from outside gambling interests via the Republican Governors Association.

Meanwhile, Barbour's election opponent, Democrat trial lawyer John Arthur Eaves, has ardently opposed casino expansion in Mississippi and has vowed he will not take gambling money.

Earlier this year, Barbour's old lobbying firm helped fast-track a liquor license for the Hard Rock Casino in Biloxi, and Barbour's chief of staff, Charlie Williams, is on record saying the Governor's office "encouraged" the state Gaming Commission and alcoholic-beverage control division to "expedite" the casino's approval process.

You can read the entire article
www.onenewsnow.com/2007/09/mississippi_governor_assailed.php

Monday, October 22, 2007

Mississippi Constitution

SECTION 18.
No religious test as a qualification for office shall be required; and no preference shall be given by law to any religious sect or mode of worship; but the free enjoyment of all religious sentiments and the different modes of worship shall be held sacred. The rights hereby secured shall not be construed to justify acts of licentiousness injurious to morals or dangerous to the peace and safety of the state, or to exclude the Holy Bible from use in any public school of this state.

Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Who's On Jesus' Side in Mississippi?

EDITORIAL
Who's On Jesus' Side in Mississippi?

Robert Parham
Robert Parham is executive director of the Baptist Center for Ethics.
10-17-07
www.ethicsdaily.com

His momma read him Bible stories at bed time and rocked him to sleep singing the old hymn "In the Garden." He gave his life to Christ at age 8 and walked where Jesus did at age 9. Thirty-years later, he stood on the banks of the Jordan River as three of his own sons professed faith and were baptized. His wife's name is Angel. He is pro-life, pro-prayer, pro-Bible literacy and pro-guns. He's a Southern Baptist running for office.

And no, John Arthur Eaves is not a Republican. He's running for the governorship of Mississippi as a Democrat against Haley Barbour, the Republican incumbent who was chairman of the Republican National Committee from 1993 to 1997.

"I'm a Democrat because I'm a Christian," Eaves said in an interview. "Jesus came to help the people. He healed the sick, and he tried to help the poor. The Democrats' core fiber is to help people. That was Jesus' mission."

Eaves' mission is to convince enough voters that he's on Jesus' side to win the governor's race.

One TV ad opens with a picture of a wooden cross next to a lake on a cloudy day with Eaves' talking about his baptism. Following frames include his family holding hands and praying at supper time, posing together in front of their church and children praying in school. He closes by asking viewers to prayerfully consider voting for him.

Another TV ad begins with Eaves leaning on a farm fence holding what looks like a brown, leather-covered Bible: "Jesus ministered to the least and the lost. And he threw the moneychangers out of the temple. I'm not perfect, but I've dedicated my life to helping the powerless."

In a summer speech at the Neshoba County Fair, Eaves said, "I am running for governor because I believe Mississippi can be better and it will be better when we take the reins of government from the special interests who hold the keys to the governor's mansion."

"Haley Barbour has opened the doors of power to the moneychangers: Big Tobacco, Big Oil, Big Insurance. These groups--who Haley has lobbied for--may talk about helping Mississippi, but they are merely wolves in sheep's clothing who have been making false promises and pulling the financial strings of our leaders to force us to accept false choices," said Eaves.

Toward the end of his speech, Eaves said, "I am putting my entire life savings into this crusade. Instead of accepting money from special interests, I have freed myself to do my best to answer this call to service, with a clean conscience and with no allegiance to any but God and the great people of Mississippi."

Eaves' populace campaign is crammed with both obvious and veiled biblical imagery--wolves vs. sheep, moneychangers vs. Jesus, the powerful vs. the least of these, false choices vs. the true way, pridefulness vs. humbleness.

No wonder Barbour is annoyed about Eaves' aggressive insertion of faith into politics. After all, in a state where every home has more than one Bible, Eaves message has traction, while Barbour's persona looks religiously sterile.

"My opponent loves to quote the Bible," said Barbour, accusing Eaves of being sanctimonious and arguing that campaigns ought to be about public policy.

Of course, Barbour didn't seem to have a problem with the GOP being labeled as the God's Only Party over the past 25 years.

But now that a faithful Democrat is quoting the Bible, Barbour has flip-flopped on faith--faith has no role in politics, a shameful twist of hypocrisy.

Eaves, on the other hand, exhibits an authentic faith both through his example of regular church attendance with his family and his advocacy of those at the margins of life rather than advancing the interests of the powerful.

"I see him every week. He attends the Madison campus, unless he's out campaigning," said Jeff Redding, campus pastor for Pinelake Church, a church affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention and located on two different campuses in the Jackson-area.

Redding told EthicsDaily.com, "He has never mentioned the campaign to me on Sunday because we are wrapped up in what God is doing."

If Eaves ran as a Republican, his faith-based campaign would be accepted uncritically among conservative religionists, and the SBC bureaucracy would promote his candidacy.

As a Democrat, his faith appeal appears too excessive, too out of character for the way we think about faith and politics.

However, the more Democrats strive to display their faith and Republicans stumble away from faithfulness, the more likely that a resilient new cultural storyline will emerge, one that dislodges the 25-year prevailing myth that God favors on one party.

Robert Parham is executive director of the Baptist Center for Ethics.

Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Front Page New York Times Story on John Eaves

Hattip to cottonmouth


The New York Times:


“The Eaves campaign, with its heavy emphasis on prayer and faith, says it is gaining with evangelicals and born-again Christians in Mississippi, a voting bloc making up perhaps half of the electorate here. And evangelicals are paying attention.”

On Main Street in the small towns, some nod appreciatively as Mr. Eaves evokes a “new day in Mississippi, where our children go to school with voluntary, student-led school prayers.”

“‘I’m a Democrat because Democrats invest in people; I’m a Democrat because I’m a Christian,’ [Eaves] said in a recent interview, after shaking hands at a diner in the courthouse town of Kosciusko. ‘Jesus came to help the people. He healed the sick, and he tried to help the poor. The Democrats’ core fiber is to help people. That was Jesus’ mission.’”

“John Arthur sounds pretty good. He’s going to cut the sales tax and put prayer back in schools,” said Charles Salley, behind the cash register, as Mr. Eaves’s bus pulled out of town.

“Put the Good Lord back in everything. That’s a priority,” Mr. Salley said.


Entire Acticle

NY TIMES

Monday, October 8, 2007

Necrotizing fasciitis, The Flesh Eating Disease

Yesterday, MPW received a prayer request for 2 year old Grace who has Necrotizing Fasciitis, The Flesh Eating Disease. Please be in Pray for her and her family. Although this disease is still consider rare, ever since my Mother-in-law went through this a few years back, I hearing about more and more cases of it.

Necrotizing fasciitis or fasciitis necroticans, commonly known as “flesh-eating bacteria,” is a rare infection of the deeper layers of skin and subcutaneous tissues, easily spreading across the fascial plane within the subcutaneous tissue. Many types of bacteria can cause necrotizing fasciitis.

The infection begins locally, at a site of trauma, which may be severe (such as the result of surgery), minor, or even non-apparent. The affected skin is classically, at first, very painful without any grossly visible change. With progression of the disease, tissue becomes swollen, often within hours. Diarrhea and vomiting are common symptoms as well. Inflammation does not show signs right away if the bacteria is deep within the tissue. If it is not deep, signs of inflammation such as redness and swollen or hot skin show very quickly. Skin color may progress to violet and blisters may form, with subsequent necrosis (death) of the subcutaneous tissues. Patients with necrotizing fasciitis typically have a fever and appear very ill. More severe cases progress within hours, and the mortality rate is high, about 30%. Even with medical assistance, antibiotics take a great deal of time to react to the bacteria, allowing the infection to progress to a more serious state.

The diagnosis is confirmed by either blood cultures or aspiration of pus from tissue, but early medical treatment is crucial and often presumptive; thus, antibiotics should be started as soon as this condition is suspected. Initial treatment often includes a combination of intravenous antibiotics including penicillin, vancomycin and clindamycin. If necrotizing fasciitis is suspected, surgical exploration is always necessary, often resulting in aggressive debridement (removal of infected tissue). As in other maladies characterized by massive wounds or tissue destruction, hyperbaric oxygen treatment can be a valuable adjunctive therapy, but is not widely available. Amputation of the affected organ(s) may be necessary. Repeat explorations usually need to be done to remove additional necrotic tissue. Typically, this leaves a large open wound which often requires skin grafting. The associated systemic inflammatory response is usually profound, and most patients will require monitoring in an intensive care unit.

Sunday, October 7, 2007

Matthew 5

I love Matthew chapter 5

3"Blessed are the poor in spirit,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
4Blessed are those who mourn,
for they will be comforted.
5Blessed are the meek,
for they will inherit the earth.
6Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness,
for they will be filled.
7Blessed are the merciful,
for they will be shown mercy.
8Blessed are the pure in heart,
for they will see God.
9Blessed are the peacemakers,
for they will be called sons of God.
10Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness,
for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.
11"Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me. 12Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Barbour and Eaves on Prayer

In a press release on Sept 25th, Governor Haley Barbour officially proclaimed “See You at the Pole” Day as the fourth Wednesday in September, which falls on September 26 this year. I want to commend the Governor for this action.

The Governor is quoted as saying: “This proclamation recognizes the importance of allowing our students to come together in celebration of their faith and religious convictions,” Governor Barbour said. “As a Christian, I’m proud to set aside this special day of prayer and I look forward to standing with Mississippi students as they embrace their rights to engage in appropriate, religious activity on school grounds.”

At first I thought this was a great statement then it hit me "their rights to engage in "appropriate" , religious activity on school grounds." It's appropriate for students to meet once a year and pray outside (like a bunch of smokers at work) around the flag pole but not in the classroom 10 minutes daily.

I'm sure this stems from the Governors' Debate in which John Eaves explained his plan for voluntary, student-led school prayer. The Governor proclaimed voluntary, student-led school prayer as unconstitutional and he didn't want to fight for it for fear we would lose the rights we do have.

Governor Barbour, I want to let you in on a secret, we have already lost our Christian rights! Thanks to men too afraid to fight. "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing". I've read both the United States' constitution and the Mississippi state constitution and have found nothing that says we can't not set aside 10 minutes per day in our public schools for students to pray if they choose. In fact Sec 18 of the Mississippi constitution reads "The rights hereby secured shall not be construed...to exclude the Holy Bible from use in any public school of this state."

John Eaves is calling for voluntary, student-led school prayer every day, not just once a year during "See You at the Pole" day.

John Eaves is quoted as saying, "For nearly 200 years, our country had prayer in its schools," said Eaves. "Today, Mississippi has the highest high school dropout rate in the nation, and our children face a learning environment that fails to instill in them a respect for themselves, their peers, and their teachers. I believe we should have voluntary prayer in our schools for children of all faiths every day, and as Governor I know I can bring it back in way that is both constitutional and right for all of our children."

Eaves says he would work with the state board of education and local school boards to create a policy that sets aside 10 minutes every day before school for students to voluntarily discuss ethics, morality, faith, and prayer. The plan does not require prayer, but rather designates time every day for students to exercise their constitutional rights.

If we can set aside 30 minutes for lunch for a physical need there is no reason why we can't set aside 10 minutes for our children's spiritual needs.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

THANKSGIVING PRAYER REVIVAL

Paul Ott sent me the following announcement. He and I agree that Gods want to do something big in our nation and it can start in Mississippi. For information about Paul Ott visit Our Friends

THANKSGIVING PRAYER REVIVAL

Event: THANKSGIVING PRAYER MEETING
When: TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 20TH
Time: 3:30PM - 5:00 PM CANDLELIGHT PRAYER AT 5:00 PM

Location: OLD CHURCH GROUNDS SMALLTOWN, MISSISSIPPI
Where: MISSISSIPPI AG AND FORESTRY MUSEUM
LAKELAND DRIVE -- JACKSON, MISSISSIPPI
Invitation: OPEN TO EVERYONE
Admission: NO CHARGE -- EVERYONE IS WELCOME


PLEASE COME AND ENJOY THE EARLY 1900’S SMALLTOWN, MISSISSIPPI. JOIN IN THE PRAYERS AND MUSIC TO THANK GOD FOR OUR STATE AND COUNTRY AND PRAY FOR A NATIONWIDE REVIVAL. HEAR PROCLAIMED MIRACLES AND REQUESTS FOR MIRACLES. PLEASE COME AND SHOW SUPPORT FOR OUR LORD AND THE BLESSINGS HE HAS BESTOWED UPON OUR PEOPLE AND FEEL THE PRESENCE OF GOD AS THIS PLACE BECOMES HOLY GROUND.

THANKS.

PAUL OTT

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CALL 1-800-684-9486 OR 1-601-248-7000.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

We must never Forget!

Let us remember to pray for our country and her leaders, today. And to thank God for His blessings and for being in control even in our darkest hours.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

The Mississippi Band of Choctaws wants to build another casino

The Jackson County Baptist Association announced its opposition to a $375 million casino proposed on Choctaw land off Miss. 57. Haley Barbour has said he is opposed to the project but can we really trust him after Barbour and a majority of legislators brushed aside Christians' concerns and swiftly approved gambling expansion to include land-based casinos. State law was also changed to allow new casinos to expand inland into areas not previously permitted. I also noticed that the Band of Choctaws have given $20,000 to Barbour's campaign fund. (a small price to pay to insure your $375 million casino gets built)

Baptist Association opposed to Choctaw casino

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Faith, not FEMA, rebuilds after Katrina

Finally, someone in the media gives credit where credit is due. If you are like me, I'm tired of the media giving credit for the Katrina recovery to the government and to the casinos. Anyone who is informed knows that credit for the Katrina recovery belongs to the many Church and community groups who gave their time and money for the clean up effort.

Faith, not FEMA, rebuilds after Katrina

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Barbour's Family, Partners Profit From Mississippi Katrina Reconstruction

I am afraid this is just the beginning.

Mississippi Governor's Associates Profit From Katrina Recovery


By Timothy J. Burger

Aug. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Many Mississippians have benefited from Governor Haley Barbour's efforts to rebuild the state's devastated Gulf Coast in the two years since Hurricane Katrina. The $15 billion or more in federal aid the former Republican national chairman attracted has reopened casinos and helped residents move to new or repaired homes.

Among the beneficiaries are Barbour's own family and friends, who have earned hundreds of thousands of dollars from hurricane-related business. A nephew, one of two who are lobbyists, saw his fees more than double in the year after his uncle appointed him to a special reconstruction panel. Federal Bureau of Investigation agents in June raided a company owned by the wife of a third nephew, which maintained federal emergency- management trailers.

Meanwhile, the governor's own former lobbying firm, which he says is still making payments to him, has represented at least four clients with business linked to the recovery.

No evidence has surfaced that Barbour violated the law; at the same time, the pattern that emerges from public records and interviews raises ``many red flags,'' said Ken Boehm, chairman of the National Legal and Policy Center, a watchdog group in Falls Church, Virginia, that investigates the investments of government officials. ``At the minimum, the public is entitled to a full explanation of the facts,'' he said.

Barbour, 59, who is running for re-election this year, turned down an interview request. His spokesman, Pete Smith, declined in an e-mail to answer questions.

Big-Name Clients

Mississippi records show that Henry and Austin Barbour, sons of Haley's older brother Jeppie, registered as state lobbyists soon after their uncle was elected in 2003. In January 2004, Henry, who managed the gubernatorial campaign, and Austin joined Capitol Resources LLC in Jackson, located less than a block from the governor's mansion, which represented such big- name clients as Lorillard Tobacco Co. and Northrop Grumman Ship Systems.

In July 2005, Capitol Resources signed on to represent Government Consultants Inc., a local firm that advises Mississippi and Louisiana on state bond issues. Deborah Phillips, president of Government Consultants, praises the work of Capitol Resources, saying Henry, 43, and Austin, 31, have ``good resources.'' Haley Barbour is ``naturally not going to be disinclined to help those boys when he can,'' said Ed Brunini Jr., the governor's lawyer.

Katrina struck the Gulf Coast on Aug. 29, 2005, flooding low-lying regions including the city of New Orleans, killing 1,330 people and causing an estimated $96 billion in damage in Mississippi and Louisiana.

Recovery and Renewal

After the storm, Haley Barbour formed the Governor's Commission on Recovery, Rebuilding and Renewal, appointing former Netscape Communications Corp. Chief Executive Officer James Barksdale as chairman and Henry Barbour as its unpaid executive director. The panel met from September through December of that year; in an e-mail, Henry Barbour says he took ``a leave of absence'' from lobbying while volunteering on the commission.

Government Consultants paid $65,000 for Henry Barbour's lobbying from July 2005 through 2006, a period that included his work on the governor's commission, state records show. Principals in the firm also gave at least $27,500 to Haley Barbour's re-election campaign in 2006; Henry Barbour is the campaign's treasurer.

Among the commission's recommendations was the sale of bonds to finance the Katrina recovery. According to state reports and figures provided by Government Consultants, the firm landed about $2.4 million in Mississippi bond fees in 2006, including at least $400,000 from Katrina-related issues. Its fees were up 3.3 percent from 2005, the first year Barbour lobbied for the company, and 125 percent from 2004, the year before it hired him.

Escalating Fees

All told, Henry Barbour's lobbying fees -- $150,000 in 2004, his uncle's first year in office -- rose to $183,000 in 2005, the year of the hurricane, and $379,000 last year.

In his e-mail, Henry Barbour said that ``I don't have any role with state bond issues in Mississippi.'' Government Consultants Vice President Steve Pittman said in an e-mail that most of the fees the company earns are awarded by cities and counties, and aren't controlled by the state of Mississippi.

Barbour said in his e-mail that he worked hard on the commission, which won a federal ``Gulf Guardian Award'' for its efforts. He said wanted ``to help position Mississippi for the best possible recovery.'' Having ``the same last name as Governor Barbour clearly puts a target on my back,'' he added. Barbour said Capitol Resources decided after the storm ``to not take any new, recovery-related clients.''

Engineering Firm

Last Oct. 18, Henry Barbour registered to lobby for Camp Dresser & McKee Inc., a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based engineering firm that had also been a client of his uncle's firm in Washington. A week later, seven CDM officials each gave the governor's re-election campaign $1,000.

One of the projects recommended by the governor's reconstruction commission was a $3 million study of water management systems in six Mississippi counties affected by Katrina. Camp Dresser and Waggoner Engineering, another client of Henry Barbour's firm, worked on that project. CDM paid Henry $15,000 for the final quarter of 2006, according to state lobbying records.

Officials at Waggoner didn't return calls, and a CDM spokeswoman wouldn't comment.

Another Relative

The FBI raid involved another relative of the governor, Rosemary Ramirez Barbour, who's married to Henry's and Austin's brother Charles, 44, a member of the Hinds County board of supervisors. Rosemary owns a Jackson company, Alcatec LLC; OMB Watch, a Washington organization that monitors federal spending, says the company has received almost $27 million in U.S. contracts to maintain trailers used by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the government's disaster-relief arm.

On June 21, FBI agents searched three Alcatec offices, seizing computers and documents as part of an investigation into what the warrant said was possible mail fraud. The company didn't respond to repeated requests for comment.

Brunini, Haley Barbour's lawyer, said in a telephone interview that the governor ``doesn't have any connection with Charles Barbour, and certainly not with his wife.'' Smith, the governor's spokesman, declined to comment.

It isn't just Barbour relatives who have found opportunities in Katrina-related work; lobbyists at the governor's former firm, Washington-based Barbour Griffith & Rogers LLC, have profited from Katrina, too.

Salvaging a Casino

On Feb. 9 of this year, the governor's two partners, Ed Rogers and Lanny Griffith, filed forms with the state of Mississippi disclosing lobbying they did last year for Leucadia National Corp., a New York-based buyout firm that acquired the Hard Rock Casino in Biloxi, which had been ravaged by Katrina just days before its scheduled grand opening.

The lobbyists used their personal addresses instead of the business office that still bears Barbour's name. They faxed the forms from a FedEx Kinko's store in Washington. Rogers, 48, said in an e-mail that he and Griffith, 56, used their personal addresses because Mississippi asks lobbyists to file as individuals. The state form asks for a ``physical address.'' Lobbyists such as Henry Barbour commonly use a business address.

Leucadia paid Rogers and Griffith $80,000 each, according to state filings. Casino president Joe Billhimer said he believes Rogers helped Leucadia win state approval of its liquor license. Barbour's chief of staff, Charlie Williams, said ``we encouraged'' the state Gaming Commission and alcoholic-beverage control division ``to expedite'' the Hard Rock's approval process, ``and they did.''

Rogers's Response

``Not going to talk about my client's work,'' Rogers said in a telephone interview. A Leucadia official didn't return phone calls seeking comment.

According to federal records, Barbour Griffith & Rogers also received $200,000 from USMP Group LLC, an Iuka, Mississippi, company incorporated five weeks after Katrina by an attorney in the Jackson office of Balch & Bingham, a Birmingham, Alabama, law firm where Rogers is of counsel.

USMP manager Billy Kidd said the company plans to produce concrete and open the largest U.S. Department of Transportation- grade stone quarry in Mississippi, which could be used in reconstruction.

Beer and Kleenex

Kidd said BGR arranged a meeting with officials of the Mississippi State Department of Transportation for the fledgling firm. Today, the USMP facility, in an industrial park owned by Tishomingo County, shows few signs of activity, county officials say. Kidd said telling USMP's story would take ``a case of beer and a box of Kleenex.''

It isn't exactly clear what ties Governor Barbour retains to the lobbying firm. While the governor was listed as president of Barbour Griffith & Rogers Inc. in Mississippi filings through March 6 of this year, Todd Eardensohn, the firm's chief financial officer, said this was an error he made when BGR converted to a limited liability company in 2004.

Unlike previous governors, Barbour hasn't released his income-tax returns. In January 2004, shortly after his inauguration, he told the Associated Press that ``it's plain to everybody that I have nothing to do with the firm,'' adding, ``They didn't give me a bunch of going-away cash.''

On an Aug. 6 call-in show on American Family Radio, Barbour said that ``they do pay me retirement. I don't want to act like they don't.'' His attorney, Brunini, said this could also be considered a buyout payment, and that a manager overseeing Barbour's assets may have made ``a deal to cash that out and invest it in some other way.''

`Nothing From the Firm'

Rogers said last week that Barbour ``gets nothing from the firm.'' The governor ``earns no income from the firm and does not participate in the firm's governance or operations,'' he said. On March 20, Rogers gave Barbour's re-election campaign $25,000 and Griffith gave $5,000.

Barbour has placed his personal holdings in a blind trust, a move critics say serves mostly to shield them from public and regulatory scrutiny. ``Governor Barbour's so-called `blind trust' has 20/20 vision,'' said Brad Pigott, a former Clinton administration U.S. attorney for the Mississippi district that includes Jackson. ``I don't know of a soul down here who believes Governor Barbour doesn't know what Governor Barbour owns or gets out of the Washington lobbying firm that still uses his name.''

The state's Democratic attorney general, Jim Hood, has told Barbour he ``must report'' the ``actual assets'' in his trust, according to a Jan. 29 letter from lawyer Brunini to the state Ethics Commission.

Brunini defended the use of blind trusts, telling the commission that while ``Mississippi has no formal statutory or regulatory procedure'' authorizing them, ``there is clearly no specific prohibition against their use.''

To contact the writer of this story: Timothy J. Burger in Washington at tburger2@bloomberg.net .

Wednesday, August 8, 2007

Barbour on Gambling

Gov. Haley Barbour a special guest on Dr. Matt Friedeman’s American Family Radio talk show last Monday, said gambling was not immoral. This come as a "slap in the face" to evangelicals whom supported Barbour four years ago. Dr. Friedeman, one of American Family Radio’s most reliable defender of conservative Christian values, did not let him off the hook easy.

Friday, August 3, 2007

Governor Haley Barbour to speak about his Faith on AFR

Gov. Haley Barbour will be the special guest on Dr. Matt Friedeman’s American Family Radio talk show this Monday, the 6th from 5-6PM. Dr. Friedeman has been one of American Family Radio’s most prophetic voices and a reliable defender of conservative Christian values, and this will be a great opportunity for Christians around the state to listen to our Governor address the issues we care about in a faith context.

And for Mississippi’s Prayer Warriors, we’ll get a better understanding of where Barbour needs our prayers. Dr. Friedeman’s program is a call in show, so it will also provide listeners with a chance to call in and ask the Governor about the issues we care the most about.

A list of AFR stations can be found at:

http://www.afr.net/newafr/stationlist/mississippi.asp

You can also "listen live" on the internet at http://wqst.afr.net/

Tuesday, July 31, 2007

Faith-Friendly in the Workplace

Here is a great article my friend Brett at Majority in MS sent me. It's about Chick-fil-A's Christian business values. I can attest to the fact that Chick-fil-A is a great company that put Christ before profits. My first Job after college was working for Chick-fil-A's home office staff in Atlanta.

Faith-Friendly in the Workplace
By Heather Sells
CBN News
July 31, 2007


CBNNews.com -- Faith in the workplace. It used to mean employees praying quietly to themselves or simply displaying a framed verse on their desk.

But more and more secular companies are seeing the benefits of faith, and offering outlets in the regular work day.

Chick-Fil-A sells billions of dollars in chicken sandwiches and fries every year.

But executives say the company's purpose isn't really selling chicken -- instead it's to glorify God.

"One of the things that I feel confident about is that my work life is an expression of the higher values of my life," Tim Tassopolous said.

For them, corporate activities like prayer are not unusual.

And they still insist that all stores stay closed on Sundays.

Companies like Chick-Fil-A see the benefits of faith in the workplace.

"Possibly companies need to wake up to the fact that they need to spend the effort and money to help maintain a stability and quality of people who are performing well," Cathy said

And now, some mainstream companies are taking notice.

For instance, Tyson, American Airlines and Intel all offer some type of faith-based program for employees.

And Youth With A Mission's business outreach director says the number of the workplace ministries has risen from 25 to more than 900 in the last 10 years.

Some say the upsurge in religious interest is just a sign of the times.

After 9-11, faith moved into the forefront for many people.

And politicians aren't afraid to voice their commitment to faith.

One agency called Marketplace Chaplains has also seen a big surge in interest -- employing almost 2,000 people in 36 states.

The non-profit believes a chaplain can offer help and encouragement to struggling employees.

"If a person can't conduct their personal life, you can't expect them to be a high performer in his business," Cathy said.

Companies find that faith-based programs decrease employee turnover, increase productivity, reduce employee stress, and improve workplace safety.

"If I was a business leader I'd have to say -- 'This is an investment in people,'" Ty said.

While some companies might hesitate at taking time out for spiritual matters, in the end improving morale is not just good for the employee, it's good for business

http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/204966.aspx

Friday, July 27, 2007

Neshoba county fair - My Visit

Yesterday, Thursday, July 26Th, I spent the better part of the morning listening to candidates give their speeches in the normal traditions of the Neshoba county fair. While I didn't get a chance to hear everyone, I did hear Mike Lott claim his Christian faith. Also, Delbert Hoseman freely proclaimed his.

However, the winner in my opinion was John Arthur Eaves. Every sentence was laced with Biblical principles and/or scriptural references. (I almost "Amened" him a few times.) His message was so outstanding that a group of Barbour supporters tried--very rudely--to disrupt his speech. I briefly spoke with Eaves after his speech, and we had a great conversation about the Lord. He truly is a wonderful Christian man with a burning desire to help Mississippians.

In Barbour’s speech, he spent the first part attacking Eaves' wife, Angel. Angel Eaves is smart, attractive, and nice. I guess the Governor's covetness nature was coming out. Asked to respond later, Angel Eaves told The Associated Press, "I can't and still be a lady." I thought that was a classy response to a classless remark. Barbour really came off as a "big jerk". Just like the "big Bully in 5th grade" that never grew up. Lastly, he talked about the only two things he always talks about: how great he is for the Katrina relief effort and how great he is for the Toyota plant that is supposed to come in 2010 or something.

Being a Christian and a father of four, you can't make me happy about legalized gambling getting a stronger foothold in Mississippi. I don't care about the economical benefits (which are debatable); I know God is not going to bless a state that promotes sin.

I'm glad I went today. As a Christian, I thought I was doing the right thing by voting for Barbour in the last election. Now that I am informed of his true nature, he is not getting my vote.

Monday, July 23, 2007

The Great Gambling Giveaway

The Great Gambling Giveaway appeared in a recent issue of the Baptist Record. I think it is a must read to put reality back into this issue. Below is part of the story:


Wayne Pinkerton has never been inside the casinos that now dot the Mississippi Gulf Coast in every direction, but he can tell you the exact day each one reopened after Hurricane Katrina.“When the casinos were all closed down after Katrina, no one came to the church asking for money or any other benevolence because they had lost everything gambling - not one person,” said Pinkerton, former church administrator at First Church, Biloxi, and currently the procurement officer at the Mississippi Baptist Convention Board in Jackson.

Read the entire story here:
The Great Gambling Giveaway

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Dean: Democrats Move Debate Forward on Shared Values

Here is a press release from the Democratic National Committee. I'm all for saving more babies.

Washington, DC - This week, Democrats in the House of Representatives voted to include the "Reducing the Need for Abortions Initiative" in the Fiscal Year 2008 Labor, Health and Human Services, and EducationAppropriations bill. Among the programs included in the $647 millionpackage are initiatives to promote appropriate contraceptive information and services, to increase access to health care for pregnant women and young children, to support child care assistance and domestic violence programs, and to provide funding for after-school programs.

Democratic National Committee Chairman Howard Dean today issued the following statement:

"Yesterday, Democrats in Congress took concrete steps to support women and families and unite the country around our shared values of reducing the number of abortions. The programs supported with this initiative are directly relevant to the needs of women who may be facing a difficult decision. For too long, Republicans have cynically used the intensely personal issue of abortion to divide us to win votes. Democrats are moving beyond the divisive elements of this debate toward the common good and bringing the country together around ideas we can all support. I commend the Democratic Members of the House for their leadership in bringing us together and moving America forward."

Casinos Booming after Katrina -- Record Breaking

Thanks to our Governor and MS legislators who allowed casinos to move inland, the casino thieves are having record breaking year. I guess with all the Katrina relief funds rolling in. I am ashamed of our state government calling a special session in order to help the gambling industry. Especially since Barbour promised us no casino expansions. Am I the only one left who thinks this is wrong?

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/07/16/business/16casinos.html?pagewanted=2&_r=1&ref=us

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Welcome to Mississippi Prayer Warriors

My name is Kevin Nieminen, founder and webmaster of MississippiPrayerWarriors.Org. We are a mainstream Christian organization, dedicated to mobilizing members of the Christian faith throughout the state to pray for our leaders, our institutions of government, and our candidates for future office.

It is our intent to continually and consistently carry the issues that face our great state before the throne of the Almighty, seeking His wisdom and guidance for those who lead the way.The Bible says in Jeremiah 29:7: "seek the peace and prosperity of the city to which I have carried you... Pray to the LORD for it, because if it prospers, you too will prosper." I believe that our leaders must be armed with the consolidated prayers of the faithful community in order to effectively approach the difficult decisions that must be made in our contemporary society.

With that said, I hope you will join me and other Mississippians as we seek to pray for a better Mississippi.With kindest regards for your service to Almighty God and the great state of Mississippi, I am

Sincerely yours,



Kevin Nieminen
Founder and Webmaster
MississippiPrayerWarriors.Org