Friday, November 7, 2008

Election Results

By Chuck Colson

11/7/2008




Opportunity Unlimited

Over the last few days, I have been besieged with calls from Christian friends in deep despair over the election. I understand the feeling. The President-elect, along with his newly strengthened allies in Congress, opposes almost every pro-life and pro-family position conservative Evangelicals and conservative Catholics have fought for so hard.

The election was tough in another way, as well. We lost some good friends in Congress. I think particularly of Robin Hayes, an outstanding Christian Congressman from North Carolina. And Marilyn Musgrove from Colorado, who courageously led the initiative for the marriage amendment and was targeted by gay activists, who spent $14 million dollars to defeat her.

But as I told the hand-wringers who called me, we must never despair. It is a sin to deny the sovereignty of God. We just have to learn how to live differently. But I’ll talk more about that in the future.

First, this is the new President’s hour. And we should be praying for him. Major decisions which affect the welfare of us all are in his hands.

Second, we ought to take pleasure in the joy expressed by African Americans over Obama’s election. They have fought hard for civil rights, and now one of their own is President. I was moved to tears myself election night watching Jesse Jackson standing in the crowd, alone, tears flowing down his face. This can be a good thing for the United States of America.

We should also be pleased at the jubilation around the world at the election of America’s first black president, which has smashed the stereotype of America as an oppressive white superpower throwing its weight around. This could build unprecedented good will for us among many other nations—nations with whom we must cooperate on many important issues.

Third, this may be a teachable moment for all of us. Ever since the 1960s, liberal political leaders have built their power bases by telling minorities that they are the exploited victims of racism.

Tragically, many African-Americans feel, rightly or wrongly, that there is nothing they can do to help themselves except to elect politicians who promise to pour money into their communities. All these politicians have done is feed the grievance mentality and stay in power; the poor remain as poor as ever.

Obama’s election shatters that delusion. How could any young African-American any longer believe that he is destined to a life of crime and poverty simply because he was born black? Obama’s election demonstrates that America truly is the land of opportunity for every citizen regardless of the color of his skin, the circumstances of his birth, or the community from which he comes. If this new attitude takes hold, I could see us rebuilding the pits of despair and depression that many inner cities neighborhoods have become.

Having said that—I have my differences with the incoming President and the majorities in Congress—and I, for one, will continue for one to fight hard for the unborn and for traditional marriage, among other issues.

So don’t give up, or retreat into your sanctuaries, as some are suggesting. Stay tuned to BreakPoint. I’ll be back in due course with some strong ideas for us on how the church ought to now live.

Today's BreakPoint Offer

Turn the world right side up. Learn about the 2009 Centurions Program and apply to study Christian worldview with Chuck Colson!

For Further Reading and Information

The Day After: Pray for Our President and Our Nation,” BreakPoint Commentary, 5 November 2008.

The Solzhenitsyn Challenge: Restoring Public Courage,” BreakPoint Commentary, 4 November 2008.


Wednesday, November 5, 2008

The Day After

BreakPoint Commentaries

The Day After

By Chuck Colson
11/5/2008




Pray for Our President and Our Nation

Whether you voted for Barack Obama or John McCain, whether you’re recovering from your all-night celebration or drying the tears from your pillow, today’s a good day to remember the words of the apostle Paul: “I urge, then, first of all, that requests, prayers, intercession and thanksgiving be made for everyone— for kings and all those in authority, that we may live peaceful and quiet lives in all godliness and holiness” (1 Timothy 2:1-3).

And the new President will surely need our prayers because he and his administration face huge, serious challenges to the health of our nation and to peace in the world—challenges that, in my opinion, neither he nor any government on earth will have the power to overcome without divine aid.

How has America come to this point? Why is our economy on the brink of disaster? Why is our culture so utterly depraved?

I can only think of what Alexandr Solzhenitsyn said about the catastrophic consequences of the Russian revolution. “I recall,” he said, “hearing a number of older people offer the following explanation for the great disasters that had befallen Russia: Men have forgotten God; that's why all this has happened.”

Solzhenitsyn was right. Indeed, I can’t find any better explanation for why we Americans find ourselves in the state we are in. We have forgotten God.

We have also forgotten that American democracy—indeed Western Civilization itself—is the product of the Judeo-Christian understanding of God and humanity. Without that revelation that man is created in the image of God, our founders never would have recognized the unalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. Indeed, as I and others like Rodney Stark have argued, modern science and education, liberal democracy, capitalism flourished in Western civilization precisely because of the Judeo-Christian worldview.

The attacks on Christianity these days are only going to intensify in the months ahead. But we must press on all the more to make a winsome witness. Those who would banish Christianity from American life are risking the very survival of American society.

Friends have asked me whether this economic crisis is God’s judgment upon us. I don’t know.

As I’ve re-read the Old Testament prophets recently, I couldn’t help but notice the recurring theme: The people of God turned away from Him and worshipped false idols. The result was always disaster.

Is God responsible for credit markets collapsing around the world? No. We’re responsible. Because instead of worshiping God, we’ve worshipped false idols of the marketplace, credit card companies and cheap mortgages. We’ve put our own appetites over our duties to God and neighbor.

So this is no time for Christians to go into the bunkers. No time to wail or moan over our retirement plans. This is a time to repent, to pray more, to give more. It’s a time for Christians to lead, encourage, and minister to a faltering country in a faltering economy.

This is a time for the Church to get serious about Christian discipleship. Enough cheap grace.

So pray for the new President and his administration. But most of all, my brothers and sisters, this is a time to love our neighbors and to hunger for God and His righteousness.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Debunking Alaska's Trooper-Gate

During my forty year New York City Police Department career, I held nearly every rank and was detached to run large and troubled investigative divisions of two major City and State agencies. Since retiring from the Department, I have taught college courses in criminal justice and consulted or testified about police matters for such clients as Puerto Rico, the District of Columbia, New York City, Newark, Chicago, the U.S. Justice and State Departments, and victims of police misconduct.

The controversy over Governor Palin's treatment of her former brother-in-law Michael Wooten and her dismissal of former Commissioner of Public Safety Walter Monegan has led me to look at the record as if I had been retained by a client to do so. I have therefore examined the full public record of the Wooten and Monegan cases, including the Wooten investigative files and the recently issued Alaska Legislative Council report that charged Governor Palin with an ethics violation for her role in the dismissal of Monegan.

My conclusion is that that the Wooten and Monegan matters do indeed reveal an Alaska scandal, but one very different from what has been reported by the national press. The scandal – and it is a serious one -- involves the conduct of the managers of Alaska's police agencies and the political officials who have sought to defend them and attack Governor Palin.

The story begins with Wooten's probationary term as an Alaska State Trooper, when he was found guilty of using official agency reports for personal reasons - a serious charge that in a well run police agency would have led to an extended probation at the very least. It didn't, and Wooten was given civil service status after his first year.

During his next three years, Wooten committed an astonishing six additional acts of misconduct unrelated to Palin family complaints - for which he received written admonitions and no meaningful punishment. The matter can be simply stated: Any department that treats seven findings of misconduct during the first few years of a police officer's career by doing little more than creating a papered and ignored personnel file can be categorically defined as recklessly managed.

Then came the Palin family allegations. They included Wooten's use of a police Taser on a minor, death threats made against his father-in-law (Governor Palin's father), a criminal hunting violation, public consumption of alcohol while operating a marked police vehicle, repeated acts of violence and alcohol abuse, and unlawful steroid use. Given the seven prior findings against Wooten, any well managed agency would have treated each allegation as a presumptive basis for dismissal and would have treated some as bases for dismissal even for officers with impeccable records.

Yet after the department opened its investigation of the Palin charges, no action was taken for more than six months. Only after Governor Palin's father complained in writing was the investigator's report issued - and it revealed an investigation that:

o Violated basic police investigative procedures by advising Wooten that he was under investigation before the complainant or her suggested witnesses were interviewed.

o Dismissed the drug charge on the basis of Wooten's self-provided lab report that his testosterone levels were normal - and made no apparent effort to find the "blue pill" supplier Wooten was alleged to patronize nor ordered any independent lab tests even for the steroid use allegation which Wooten's report did not negate.

o Disbelieved credible witnesses who alleged that Wooten drove his marked police vehicle into their driveway, took a beer from their refrigerator, finished it, took another, and drove away while drinking it.

o Ignored allegations of Wooten's alcohol and anger management problems, for which abundant evidence existed.

o Accepted Wooten's excuse that he did not know it was a crime to use another's hunting license.

Faced with charges of an investigative whitewash, the Director of the Alaska State Troopers conducted her own investigation and, after yet another five months, issued her findings. Her report failed to take any note of the death threat charge that the investigator had sustained or the allegations of Wooten's drinking and violence. Amazingly, it accepted without comment the investigator's dismissal of the drug use charges. Nonetheless, the Director found that:

o Wooten's seven prior misconduct charges needed to be taken into account in assessing his overall fitness, and found that Wooten's entire record demonstrated "a serious and concentrated pattern of unacceptable and at times illegal conduct occurring over a lengthy period."

o Wooten's Taser use on a minor "demonstrated extremely poor judgment and a conscience [sic] choice … very serious in nature …to violate the department's standards of conduct" – all the more because he was a departmental Taser instructor "well trained in the … risks associated with use of the weapon on a child.".

o Wooten had consumed alcoholic beverages while operating his police vehicle, which "not only exposed the Department to liability, but further demonstrates your lack of judgment … lack of good character … disregard for law … and a profound disrespect for [your] responsibilities." o

o Wooten committed the crime of unlicensed hunting, which was "exponentially exacerbate[d]" by the fact that he was a wildlife crimes investigator when he did so. She found "no question" of Wooten's knowing commission of a crime, and reported that Wooten "finally did admit that [his] conduct was illegal." She concluded with a remarkable finding that damned her department far more than it did Wooten himself: "It is nearly certain that a civilian investigated under similar circumstances would have received criminal sanction."

Despite those findings and the Director's statement that Wooten's conduct "will not be tolerated," she merely reassigned him from the Wildlife Investigations Unit, warned him of dismissal if he repeated his behaviors, and imposed an indefensibly inadequate ten-day suspension. Worse still, and in textbook demonstration of the department's managerial dysfunction, the Director responded to union pressure by reducing the suspension to five days.

Given the department's record in the Wooten case, tragic police misconduct cases have predictably occurred. Thus, the State has paid large liability sums in the contemporaneous cases of an officer who was promoted after a jury found him guilty of torturing a suspect with his Taser, another with a prior record of undisciplined violence who remained unpunished even after wrongfully killing a disabled suspect deemed unthreatening by his partner, and yet another who committed five rapes after the department failed to investigate harassment complaints of one of his victims.

Further, the indefensible double standard protection given Wooten for conduct "nearly certain" to trigger criminal prosecutions against members of the public apparently remains the department's norm. Recently asked how he handled Trooper hunting violations like Wooten's, the Director of the Wildlife Troopers Division said: "[M]ore often than not it goes into what we call an administrative inquiry, and that's how the discipline is handled."

Even more revealing and damning has been former Commissioner Monegan's definition of the Palin family complaints as acts of harassment against Wooten, and his stated belief that his primary obligation in handling the case was to protect departmental morale. He said: "My job was to provide passion and support to 900 people – almost 900 people – in the Department of Public Safety, and one of them – who included Trooper Wooten – he was an irritant to her [Governor Palin]." The statement alone justifies Monegan's dismissal – both for its clear indifference to the department's management failings and its even less defensible failure to understand that Alaska's good police officers do not feel "support[ed]" by widespread tolerance to the rogue conduct of officers like Wooten.

The recently issued Alaska Legislative Council report is yet another whitewash by State officials and further evidence of the State's continuing refusal to acknowledge the need for structural reform of its police agencies and the performance of their managers. Remarkably, the report found that Governor Palin's had grounds to fire Commissioner Monegan for reasons other than his refusal to dismiss Wooten, and further found that her action towards Monegan "was a proper and lawful exercise of her constitutional and statutory authority to hire and fire executive branch department heads." Nonetheless, the report made the Catch 22 finding that the Governor had "violat[ed her] … public trust" because her involvement in the Wooten case was an "effort to benefit a personal … interest through official action." The report's finding is thus that Governor Palin should not have taken admittedly proper action against a police administrator who failed to reform a department that, among other things, excused officers for conduct that caused "certain" criminal prosecutions to be brought when committed by civilians. Its further finding is that Governor had no right to exercise her critical constitutional responsibility to manage the State's law enforcement agencies because her knowledge of the need for reform was as least partially based on failings involving an officer who, among other things, had threatened her father's life.

Wooten's conduct clearly merited his dismissal, and his case is among the most poorly handled disciplinary matters I have ever encountered. Contrary to the Legislative Council report, Wooten and Monegan hardly merit immunity because their inexcusable conduct partially related to Governor Palin's family. In fact, the Governor's opposition to Alaska's police misconduct and her efforts to deal with the State's "good old boy" police culture greatly served its citizens -- and its honorable police officers.

Edward Mamet is a retired New York City Police Captain and a police practices consultant.

Friday, October 3, 2008

Waiting In The Hospital

Over the past 17-18 years, my wife has had over half a dozen surgeries or surgical procedures. Speaking from personal experience, these can be harrowing times. Today she's having her Gall Bladder removed. Many of you may be thinking, "Well, that's a routine surgery; what's the big deal?" With Kris, my wife, surgery has never been anything but routine.

When we were in Seminary, Kris contracted Viral Meningitis. They had to do a Spinal Tap procedure on her in the emergency room to verify the diagnosis, then sent her home. The E. R. staff neglected to tell us that she needed to lie flat on her back to let the wound heal. This led to her having to have another Spinal Tap and then a procedure called a Blood Patch to let the wound heal properly.

Kris had been sick for about 6 weeks with the Gall Bladder and now we finally received a diagnosis. As of right now, she's in the hospital, out of surgery (minus the G. B.) and sleeping in her room. They were able to do the surgery laparoscopically so that was a huge answer to prayer!

The thing that I'm learning through experiences like this is that many times the answers don't come easily or quickly. I guess the Lord is teaching us the virtue of patience. I just wish there were easier ways!

Isaiah 40:28-31 says,
Do you not know?
Have you not heard?
Yahweh is the everlasting God,
the Creator of the whole earth.
He never grows faint or weary;
there is no limit to His understanding.

29 He gives strength to the weary
and strengthens the powerless.

30 Youths may faint and grow weary,
and young men stumble and fall,

31 but those who trust in the LORD
will renew their strength;
they will soar on wings like eagles;
they will run and not grow weary;
they will walk and not faint

Here's learning to trust in the Lord; I'm still learning.

Monday, September 29, 2008

The Right Kind of Fanaticism?

The Right Kind of Fanaticism?

By Chuck Colson
9/29/2008




Global Warming and Double Standards

Imagine the media reaction if a prominent American Christian leader condoned vandalism at abortion clinics. Now imagine the reaction if he went beyond condoning vandalism and agreed to appear as a witness for the defense at the trial of those vandals.

Then imagine what would happen if he decided to export his religiously motivated crusade to another country.

Well, that’s exactly what just happened, except the religion wasn’t Christianity—it was environmentalism.

Last October, a group of Greenpeace members climbed a chimney at a power plant in Kent, England, and started to paint the words “Gordon Bin It.” The “Gordon” referred to was Prime Minister Gordon Brown and the “it” was a plan to build new coal-fired power plants at the site.

The group argued that they had a “lawful excuse” for their actions: They were trying to prevent even greater damage like “flooding from rising sea levels and damage to species” from man-made global warming.

They were charged with vandalism, and at the trial the star witness for the defense was James Hansen of NASA. That’s right, NASA, an agency of the United States government.

Twenty years ago, Hansen first sounded the alarm over man-made global warming. And as time has passed, his rhetoric has escalated. In June, he called for the CEOs of fossil fuel companies to be put on trial for “crimes against humanity and nature.”

These so-called crimes included spreading doubt about man-made global warming. In other words, disagreeing with Hansen.

At the trial, Hansen said that “somebody needs to stand up and take a leadership role” in the fight against global warming.

Avoiding “disintegration of the ice sheets [and minimizing] species extinction” requires “immediate action” he said—action that included getting rid of coal-firing plants like the one vandalized.

Hansen’s words apparently did the trick because the jury acquitted all six defendants.

Now, reasonable people can differ over the reality of man-made global warming, but it is difficult to see how what happened in Kent met the requirements of a “lawful excuse.” That standard, as the judge told the jurors, requires an “immediate need to protect property belonging to another.” Even the most enthusiastic proponents of man-made global warming acknowledge that their most dire scenarios are decades, if not centuries, away.

What happened in England is further proof of what author Michael Crichton meant when he called modern environmentalism “one of the most powerful religions in the Western World”—a religion that divides the world between “sinner” or “saved,” the “side of salvation” or the “side of doom.”

As if to confirm Crichton’s point, on the same day the Greenpeace members were acquitted, an English city council voted to impose “hefty fines” on people for using the wrong recycling bins.

So what we have here is an appeal to a “higher law”—made by a U.S. government official no less—calling for an inquisition of sorts, and zealous punishment of even the tiniest infraction.

And the media dares to call Christians “fanatics”?

Reasonable people can disagree about global warming or the role of religion in public life. But there’s no excuse—lawful or otherwise—for double standards. Especially with the newest of all religions, environmentalism.

Copyright 2008 Prison Fellowship

Today's BreakPoint Offer

Turn the world right side up. Learn about the 2009 Centurions Program and apply to study Christian worldview with Chuck Colson!

For Further Reading and Information

Cleared: Jury Decides That Threat of Global Warming Justifies Breaking the Law,” Independent (UK), 11 September 2008.

Activists Deny Damaging Chimney,” BBC News, 1 September 2008.

Michael Crichton, “Environmentalism as Religion,” 15 September 2003.

Regis Nicoll, “Averting Global Meltdown: Are Kyoto-Like Controls the Answer?,” BreakPoint Online, 4 July 2008.

Regis Nicoll, “Some Inconvenient Truths: Global Warming and Al Gore's Film,” 16 March 2007.

Gone with the Wind Farm: Saving the Environment - Somewhere Else,” BreakPoint Commentary, 5 September 2007.

Just Do It: Good Stewardship and Global Warming,” BreakPoint Commentary, 2 November 2007.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

The Bill Comes Due

BreakPoint Commentaries

The Bill Comes Due

By Chuck Colson
9/24/2008




Consumption and Crisis

If you are like me, you are shocked by the cost of the proposed bailout of the financial sector—at least $700 billion. You probably wonder why we should pay so dearly for other people’s mistakes.

But when it comes to one aspect of this financial crisis, many of us have only ourselves to blame.

As I told you yesterday, much of the mess can be laid at the feet of what Tom Wolfe ironically called the “Masters of the Universe” and their enablers in Washington. Much but not all. Our anything-goes, “you can have what you want when you want it” attitude also played an important part in creating this mess.

As you know, the financial crisis was precipitated by the meltdown of the “sub-prime” mortgage market. Millions of Americans took out mortgages they couldn’t afford to buy houses that in some cases they really didn’t need.

Maybe inspired by television shows like Flip That House, they gambled that home prices would keep rising indefinitely and they could sell or re-finance the home before the bill literally came due. They were wrong, and currently, 9 percent of all Americans with mortgages are either behind on their payments or in foreclosure. The number can only grow.

But it’s not just the sub-prime mess. The personal debt of Americans is at record levels. A well-known credit-card commercial has a man shopping for a new television set and using his cell phone to check his credit limit. Not his checking or savings account balance, but his limit! And in case you don’t get the message, the music in the background blares, “I want it all and I want it now!”

It’s not only consumer goods. Everything from the war in Iraq to Katrina recovery is funded by borrowing. Both political parties are quick to promise specific “goodies,” like new entitlements or tax cuts or new roads, but they never say how they are going to pay for them.

The answer of course is that they haven’t a clue, other than to borrow from foreigners and then stick our children and grandchildren with the bill for some future day.

A few years ago, a very intelligent man—a good friend of mine—and I had a conversation I won’t forget. He told me that he was getting out of the financial business because, in part, he was concerned about how much debt Americans were taking on. He knew that eventually our folly would catch up with us and feared a possible collapse.

Well, I don’t know if this is the collapse; I hope it’s just a warning shot across our bow. But in either case, one thing is clear: Business-as-usual can’t continue. Let’s recognize we can’t have it all—whether at the shopping mall or from government.

So first, we put our own houses in order. Next, we demand that our political leaders stop behaving like Santa Claus, or shop-a-holics in an outlet mall. In fact, I’m tempted to say we ought to be voting for the candidates who promise us the least goodies and tell us the hard truth: that is, that we have to start acting responsibly.

Tomorrow on “BreakPoint,” I will share with you a promising plan from one mature political leader who isn’t afraid to say it’s time we all sobered up.

In the meantime, contemplate the words of the Apostle Paul: “Give everyone what you owe him: If you owe taxes, pay taxes; if revenue, then revenue; if respect, then respect; if honor, then honor. Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another.”

Today's BreakPoint Offer

Turn the world right side up. Learn about the 2009 Centurions Program and apply to study Christian worldview with Chuck Colson!

For Further Reading and Information

Accounting for Disaster: Wall Street, Congress, and You,” BreakPoint Commentary, 23 September 2008.

Faith, Not Fear: God and Wall Street,” BreakPoint Commentary, 17 Septemeber 2008.

Jim Landers, “Our Kids Will Pick Up the Check for Our Financial Mess,” Dallas Morning News, 23 September 2008.

Wall Street Bailout Faces Lawmakers, Lobbyists,” BusinessWeek, 21 September 2008.

Policymakers: Congress Must Move Quickly to Avert Damage,” Washington Post, 23 September 2008.





© 2008 Prison Fellowship

The Real Enemy

The Real Enemy

For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, but... against spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places.
Ephesians 6:12

The target is clearly defined; our enemy is spiritual. Keeping a clear focus on the true nature of our demonic assailants is essential. So much of a believer’s time is wasted, energy expended, and injury incurred because we spend ourselves battling people (flesh and blood) instead of the spiritual forces at work in a situation. In the process of attempting to wrestle believers into defeat in their personal lives, the devil attempts to divert the force of our “spiritual” warfare toward others—in our families, our churches, our work place and community.

The devil knows full well these two things: (1) if we start fighting other people, they will certainly oblige us and fight back, and (2) that if we start fighting each other, we will never get around to defeating him.

So, whatever (or whoever) you face today, make up your mind about the conflict. Our enemy is the devil. As we make war in prayer and make peace with those around us, the devil stands no chance of succeeding in our lives.

Copyright 2008 Jack Hayford Ministries.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Chicago Cubs 2008 N.L. Central Division Champs

Many moons ago back in the summer of 1969, I caught a fever. The symptoms were red, white, and blue and it was called Cub fever. The Chicago Cubs were in first place in their division and doing well until the Miracle Mets overtook them and the Cubs produced one of their patented slides from 1st to worst. Now it's been 100 years since the Cubs have won a World Series and the faithful are hopeful. But at the same time, we're not holding our breath because we've been close so many times and been disappointed. I believe, but the proof is in the pudding, so to speak. If the Red Sox can do it, so can we! Go CUBS!!!

Friday, September 19, 2008

Baylor Bears

Baylor lost a heartbreaker to UConn on ESPN2 tonight, 31-28. I know UConn's not considered a football powerhouse, but they have a home winning streak of 10-11 games and tied for their conference championship last year. Baylor is 2-2 now and will probably struggle for the rest of the year. But with Coach Briles in place and Robert Griffin at quarterback, I think Baylor will be scoring some upsets this year.

Buffaloes Are Wild

Hello everyone. This is a brand new venture for me. I am attempting to record my random thoughts and regular ramblings. This is kinda scary for me because I tend to hold my innermost thoughts close to my vest. I'm not the deepest thinker or the holiest of believers but if leadership is influence, like John Maxwell says, I have to believe that I'm influencing those around me, for good or for bad. More later...