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Does anyone know the way?

Does anyone know the way?. Back in the 1990s, lots of jokes were made about “political correctness”, and almost everybody thought they were really funny.  . Nag Verbally Repetitve.

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Does anyone know the way?

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  1. Does anyone know the way?

  2. Back in the 1990s, lots of jokes were made about “political correctness”, and almost everybody thought they were really funny.  Nag Verbally Repetitve

  3. Unfortunately, very few people are laughing now because political correctness has become a way of life in America.  If you say the “wrong thing” you • could lose your job or you • could rapidly end up in • court.  Every single day, • the mainstream media • bombards us with subtle • messages that make it • clear what is “appropriate” • and what is “inappropriate”.  

  4. The goal is to control what people say to one another, because eventually that will shape what most people think and what most people believe.  • Try the following experiment some time.  Go to a public place where a lot of people are gathered and yell out something horribly politically incorrect such as “I love Jesus” and watch people • visibly cringe.  The name • of “Jesus” has become a • curse word in our • politically correct society, • and we have been trained • to have a negative reaction • to it in public places. 

  5. Have you ever noticed that it’s only the names of God and Jesus that get used in a blasphemous manner? You don’t hear a Muslim saying “Oh Allah!” or “Mohammed!” You don’t hear someone kick their toe on a rock and say “Oh Buddha!”, or drop their book and say “Hare Krishna!” The Jews don’t say “Abraham and Isaac!” It’s always “Jesus Christ”, “Oh God”. Christian singer, Barry McGuire, says that there’s a very good reason for that – because the Devil knows who his real enemy is (and it’s not • Krishna or Mohammed or • Buddha) and he wants to get • that name so abused, turned • into a swear word, that it loses • its power. The name of Jesus, • the only name in the universe able • to change lives and set people free.

  6. Billions of dollars of media “programming” has changed the definitions of what people consider to be “acceptable” and what people consider to be “not acceptable”.  • Political correctness shapes the way that we all communicate with each other every single day. 

  7. In America today, there are many groups that are absolutely obsessed with eradicating every mention of God out of the public sphere.  • The following slides are just a few examples that show how political correctness is taking over America.

  8. Physics prof a victim of ‘double standard’ in academia • Bob Kellogg (OneNewsNow.com) Monday, August 12, 2013

  9. A univeristy in Indiana has sharply denounced one of its professors for presenting the theory of intelligent design to student in his science course, The Boundaries of Science.” • In a statement to Ball State faculty and staff, Jo Ann Gora (university president) said: “Intelligent design is overwhelmingly deemed by the scientific community as a religious belief and not a scientific theory…To allow intelligent design to be presented to science students as a valid scientific theory would violate the academic integrity of the course as it would fail to accurately represent the consensus of science scholars. • Outcome: Physics professor Eric Hedin will no longer be allowed to teach “The Boundaries of Science” course, he will remain at Ball State.

  10. Authorities are cracking down on public expressions of the Christian faith all over the nation, and yet atheists in New York City are allowed to express their opinion.

  11. A judge in North Carolina has ruled that it is unconstitutional for North Carolina to offer license plates that say “Choose Life” on them.

  12. School Orders Child to Remove God From Poem • Todd Starnes

  13. A school in North Carolina ordered a six-year-old girl to remove the word “God” from a poem that she was supposed to read during a Veteran’s Day ceremony. • The girl is a first-grader at West Marion Elementary School. She was supposed to read the poem during a school assembly marking Veteran’s Day. The poem honored her two grandfathers who had served during the Vietnam War. • “He prayed to God for peace, he prayed to God for strength,” the poem read. • A parent reportedly found out about the poem and expressed concern about mentioning the word God during a school event. The parent did not want the Almighty’s name mentioned anywhere in the program, according to one account.

  14. “We wanted to make sure we were upholding the school district’s responsibility of separation of church and state from the Establishment Clause,” Supt. Gerri Martin told the McDowell News. • “We jointly decided that we must err on the side of caution to prevent crossing the line on the Establishment Clause of the Constitution,” Kirkpatrick told the newspaper, “As a principal of a public school, I must put aside my personal religious beliefs and follow the law — which upholds that we have freedom of speech and freedom of religion, but that we, as public schools, cannot endorse one single religion over another.”

  15. Track Team Disqualified for Thanking God • Todd Starnes

  16. A Texas high school track team was disqualified from competing in the state championships because one of the runners made a gesture thanking God after he crossed the finish line. • Derrick Hayes, the anchor of the Columbus High School 4×100 relay team had just crossed the finish line when he raised his finger to the sky – thanking the Lord for winning the race that would send them to the state finals. • But a judge with the University Interscholastic League, the governing body for high school athletics in Texas, ruled that the gesture was a violation of the taunting rule – and the Cardinals were stripped of their victory.

  17. Refusing to Stomp on Jesus’s Name Gets Student Banned From Class • Jenny Erikson • March 26 at 5:31 PM • News and Views

  18. Florida Atlantic University has recently come under fire due to a class activity in which students were asked to write “Jesus” on a piece of paper, put it on the floor in front of them, and stomp on it. It was supposed to teach something about culture and symbolism, and came from an official instructor’s manual. • Apparently this made several students uncomfortable, but one actually spoke out about the insulting and offensive nature of the assignment. Ryan Rotela, a devout Mormon, says he picked up the paper and put it back on his desk. “I’m not going to be sitting in a class having my religious rights desecrated,” he told a local news station. • Rotela complained to the instructor’s supervisor -- and was subsequently suspended from class!

  19. Outcome: Rotela has been charged with several violations of the student code of conduct, and has been barred from attending the class or even communicating with other involved with the situation. According to the letter, Rotela engaged in “acts of verbal, written or physical abuse, threats, intimidation, harassment, coercion, or other conduct which threatens the health, safety, or welfare of any person.” • Rotela claims the “threatening language” referred to in the letter occurred when he told the professor, “Don’t do that again,” and said, “You’ll be hearing from me.” • The school could not be reached for further comment or clarification

  20. Student ordered to remove cross necklace at California collegeEric Owens • Education Editor, • Daily Caller

  21. An official at Sonoma State University ordered a student working at a freshman orientation fair to remove or hide a cross necklace on two separate occasions. The unnamed official feared that other students could be offended by the two-inch-long symbol of Christianity. • The official, an orientation supervisor, warned Sonoma State student Audrey Jarvis that “the chancellor” enforced a policy against wearing religious items.

  22. According to Hiram Sasser, an attorney representing Jarvis, the supervisor advised the practicing Catholic “that she could not wear her cross necklace because it might offend others, it might make incoming students feel unwelcome.” • On a second occasion, the supervisor ordered Jarvis to conceal the cross under her shirt or get rid of it. That’s when the liberal arts major decided to bail early on the orientation job.

  23. Outcome: “Someone who works here was concerned that the cross might be off-putting to students who are coming to campus for the first time,” confirmed university spokeswoman Susan Kashack. She added that the supervisor’s behavior was “completely wrong.” • “It’s possible that political correctness got out of hand.” • “The president was very upset about it and asked me to contact Miss Jarvis and give a profuse apology,” Kashack said.

  24. School Calls Cops on Gideons Distributing Bibles • Todd Starnes, • Jun 19, 2013 • Town Hall

  25. Walt Tutka, a substitute teacher for the Phillipsburg School District, was fired earlier this year after he handed a Bible to a student. • Tutka told the young man at the back of a line, “The first shall be last and the last shall be first.” • When the student asked where the phrase came from Tutka pulled out a pocket New Testament and showed him the biblical text. • The student told the teacher that he did not own a Bible – so Tutka gave the young man his own copy. • The school district later charged Tutka with violating a rule that forbids the distribution of religious literature. The school board terminated his employment in January.

  26. Hiram Sasser, director of litigation for Liberty Institute, told Fox News their client was specifically targeted because he is a member of Gideon International, a religious society that distributes Bibles across the world. • “Walt was a member of the Gideons and they were out to get him,” Sasser said. “The reason we believe he was fired is because he was a member of the Gideons. They happened to know Walt was somebody they could target.” • Fox News has obtained a copy of an email from Phillipsburg Middle School Assistant Principal John Stillo that indicates the school district had an issue with the well-known religious group. • “It has been brought to the administration’s attention that Gideon’s may be near our campus to distribute literature to our students,” Stillo wrote in a memo to the school’s staff. “Please make sure they DO NOT step foot onto our campus at anytime. There will be added police and security presence at dismissal.”

  27. Gideon International has a long history of providing Bibles to public school students. But in recent years, many districts have banned the religious society. Ironically, the Gideons are welcome to distribute Bibles and deliver speeches in Russian schools. • Sasser said it was outrageous that the school would call out the police for a group that had permission from the police to distribute Bibles.

  28. Outcome:Sasser said they are going to give the EEOC (Equal Employment Opportunity Commission) one more chance to give Tutka a “fair shake.” If that doesn’t work, he said they will consider their legal options.

  29. Police Chaplains Told to Stop Invoking Jesus • Todd Starnes • Fox News

  30. For the past seven years Pastor Terry Sartain has ministered to police officers and their families in Charlotte, N.C. Whenever the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Dept. invited him to deliver an invocation, he prayed in “the name of Jesus.” • But not anymore. • Volunteer chaplains in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Dept. will no longer be allowed to invoke the name of Jesus in prayers at public events held on government property. • Major John Diggs, who oversees the chaplain program, told television station WSOC that the policy is a “matter of respecting that people may have different faiths and that it is not aimed at any one religion or denomination.”

  31. “I’m very sad about it,” he said. “I’m a pastor and Jesus is the only thing I have to offer to bless people – his life and his person.” • “It brings about a very real concern about where we are heading as a nation,” he said. “I serve a God who loves people unconditionally, who died for their sins on the cross, who wants to reconcile himself to them and love them where they are at – and now I’m told I can’t bless people as a result of that.” • The police department said he could still pray – just not to Jesus.

  32. Outcome:Sartain asked the police department to withdraw his name from consideration for future public prayers

  33. Jesus often surprised people with teachings that cut across the grain of human nature.Lose your life to save it. The first will be last. The meek will inherit the earth. Rejoice in persecution. Pray for your • enemies. It’s better to give • than receive. Turn the other • cheek. But, by far, the most • outrageous assertion Jesus • ever made — His most • politically incorrect claim • of all — was when He • declared in JOHN 14:6:

  34. 6 “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.

  35. This claim rankles people like no other. It has been called arrogant and narrow-minded and bigoted and snobbish. • So why is this claim so controversial? One reason is that it strikes at the core of threegreat myths about religion.

  36. Myth: All religions are basically the same—many roads lead to God. • Jesus said, “I Am the • Way…”

  37. If you were to go ask people, “What religion are you,” you’d get a lot of different responses--“I’m spiritual, but not religious” or “I don’t go to church”.  You would get  a rainbow of different • Religious outlooks: • Atheists, Agnostics, • Buddhists, Muslims, • Jews, Hindus, • Wiccans, and • Scientologists.

  38. You would also find a lot of people that mix and match all sorts of practices and parts of different religions to come up with their own favorite blend. • They read the Bible, use crystals, light candles, pray, practice meditation and have a spirit guide… and that’s their “faith”.  There are people who call themselves Christians, but read horoscopes, and believe in the karmic view that if you do good things then good things will happen to you. It’s all about finding their own path.

  39. “Enlighten” is a board game that promises to take people on a spiritual journey to explore the world’s religions.” • In big red letters on the web page are • the words, • “Open your • mind, free • your spirit, • come play • with • the rest of the • world!”  

  40. Some people have chosen the occult path. The police are using psychics to solve crimes. Universities are employing white witches as their chaplains. The TV is full of it with shows like Buffy the Vampire Slayer, Charmed, and Sabrina. • Every morning the first thing that millions of people will turn to their horoscope to see what the stars say the day has in store for them. • The Pagan Federation is claiming it deals • with an average of 100 enquiries per • month from youngsters who want to • Become Witches. • People are getting sucked in to the world of • the occult to try and find their direction in life.

  41. Some people have chosen the humanist path – There is evident by a current compaign involving London Buses:

  42. The humanist world says I’ll do it my way! There is no God, there is no meaning to life, your just a bunch of Chemicals that have accidentally formed together.

  43. Many people will state that all religions have the same things in common, even though they have different names. • Is that true? • Are all religions • basically the same • thing, leading to the • same place?

  44. The basic idea is that “all roads lead to God”.  No matter where you start at the bottom of the mountain, when you get to the top, everybody gets to the same peak.  Is that true?  It seems so when you are looking at it from the bottom of the mountain.

  45. At the bottom of the mountain, there are similarities and crossovers in the path. For example, there are similar sounding teachings.  Jesus • in Luke 6:31 • said, “Do to • others as • you would have • them do to you.”  • Buddha said, • “Consider others • as yourself.”  

  46. Jesus said in Luke 6:29, “If anyone strikes you on the cheek, offer the other also.”  Buddha also said, “If anyone should give you a blow • with his hand, • with a stick, or • with a knife, you • should abandon • any desires and • utter no evil • words.” 

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