Sunday, September 30, 2007

Joy of Giving

Science catches up with the Jesus once again, proving what He said. Acts 20:35 says, "I have shewed you all things, how that so labouring ye ought to support the weak, and to remember the words of the Lord Jesus, how he said, It is more blessed to give than to receive."

Ulrich Mayr, a psychology professor at the University of Oregon, has experiments and brain scans that show people get a kind of thrill from giving money to charity. You can read a Reuter's story about the experiments here. And you can read Dr. Mayr's abstract here.

Tithes and offerings have been a part of our lives for so long this seems natural. I don't notice any special feeling of euphoria but I do feel deeply that giving is right. I feel uncomfortable and get an internal nag when I don't give. But I have a question or two about the study. They gave the subjects $100 to start with and then studied their reactions to parting with that money. Would it not have been more realistic to use their own money? John Tierney, a New York Times science columnist, writes about the study and asks some provocative questions. It is a blog so you can see what his readers think.

An article in Time magazine says:
It is not just the fabulously wealthy and the entrepreneurial elite who are giving. Average Americans continue to step up, whether by volunteering at their local schools or contributing through churches, mosques and synagogues....For every Bill Gates there are literally a million Morris Popes. The 81-year-old retired train engineer has given at least $500 to the Atlanta Food Bank every year since 1982. One year he gave $1,200. And this on a retirement income of about $1,700 a month. He is almost too shy to mention the $3,000 he annually tithes to his First Corinth Missionary Baptist Church. "I look at how God has blessed me during my working years and raising my family, and I can't tell you how many times I've come to these homeless shelters and heard people say, 'My children haven't had a bite to eat today,'" says Pope. "Everyone should feel the pleasure of giving to others. If they knew that, they would give too."

We have had no more serious rain since that of Friday a week ago. But the weather has changed for the better -- the heat broke and now we have nights in the upper 40s and days in the 70s. No big change in the leaves yet but that is coming, too. We took in the "Wings Over the Smokies" motorcycle rally in Fletcher, NC, last week. Our Goldwing chapter worked the entrance gates on Thursday and then I hung out in the vendors area Friday and Saturday. Sylvia joined me at the closing ceremonies Saturday night, but we didn't win the drawing -- a 2007 Goldwing and trailer. This is one of the largest rallies for Goldwing riders in this part of the country and was the first that we attended (2004) after we starting riding again.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Finally Some Rain

Thank God! We finally had rain Friday. Maybe an inch but it was great. It rained off and on all day, pretty hard in some spots, and tapered off Friday night. Saturday dawned clear but the flora and fauna were just as happy as we were.
One of my neighbors brought her little girl into our front yard to play. You can see the fawn's legs in the right of the picture, and then a closeup of the little one. Sylvia no longer likes Bambi as much as she used to -- they eat her flowers. She gets out every other week to spray foul-smelling Liquid Fence but they still get the unprotected plants. Neighbors who raved about cute little deer when they lived in the city now have names for them, and they are not pet names.

Friday, September 07, 2007

Celebrating Green





Green Creek Festival

We spent part of Saturday enjoying the Green Creek Heritage Festival down Highway 9 a ways. Lots of pickin' and singin', a kid's tractor pull, a Fireman's Barrel Roll, and lots of food and crafts.
Several volunteer fire departments participated in the barrel roll, aiming their high pressure hoses at an empty barrel in an effort to push it across the other department's goal line. We stayed dry.
There was a sandbox full of corn for the kids to play in, a car show, farm equipment displays and lots of other stuff. My little camera didn't record the music but you can hear the Boys here. They play regularly at the City Grill in Saluda which is more commonly known as the Truck Stop. They are one of dozens of Gospel Blue Grass groups around here. Almost any week one of the 83 churches in Polk County will have a signing. A group comes in to perform for the folks.

Green Creek used to be called Green's Creek because it was named after the creek that ran through the property of William Henry Green. Uncle Billy came to Polk County before it was a county, in 1760. Now the little phone books in Polk and Rutherford County towns and across the line in South Carolina have dozens and dozens of Greens or Greenes. Some people in the same family spell that last name one way while other family members spell it the other. The cemeteries here are mostly on church grounds and there's many a Green planted in them.




Suffering Nicaragua

Nicaragua has played a large role in my life. So it is sad to read about how the Nicas are suffering again. I spent many, many weeks there over the years, reporting on Nicaraguan politics, disasters, triumphs and dreams. I opened an office there while director of the Latin American Journalism Program, spent four years training Nicaraguan journalists after the first Sandinista government was voted out of office. I baby-sat Howard Hughes when he was ensconced on the top floor of the Intercontinental Hotel, the pyramid shaped hostel that was a temporary home to hundreds of foreign correspondents, diplomats, spies and assorted other ner'do-wells a three decades ago.

So I know a lot about the country, really like its people and recall fondly my Nicaraguan friends. It always makes me sad when bad things happen to the Nicas. And bad things seem to happen to them often. The latest is Hurricane Felix.
The hurricane hit the Miskito coast, an area called the RAAN or the North Atlantic Autonomous Region, where poverty is extreme, infrastructure is weak and communication is difficult. La Prensa in Managua was reporting 168 deaths. The paper said the death toll may be much higher but authorities won't know until they contact all the small fishing villages on the coast.

Managua itself was destroyed and thousands killed in an earthquake in 1972. The epicenter was right under the city. Howard Hughes scooted out of the Intercontinental Hotel to the airport and despite the fact it was closed ordered his plane into the air. Howard wanted out of there as fast as possible.

Then came the Sandinista government of Daniel Ortega, which ruined what was left of the country's economy. Now Ortega has been reelected. In a speech celebrating the 28th anniversary of the army the Sandinistas founded he called Nicaraguan reporters "children of Goebbels" and accused them of spreading lies about his government abroad. Sounds like the 1980s all over again.

Sergio Ramirez served as vice president in Ortega's first government, then split with him and formed another wing of the Sandinista party. Ramirez was one of the "group of 12" Nicaraguan inellectuals, clerics and businessmen who broke with Anastasio Somoza to support the Sandinistas when they were trying to overthrow Somoza. Ramirez writes about the party's current status in this article.


Hurricane Felix calls to mind Hurricane Fifi about this same time 33 years ago. Fifi killed at least 8,000 people in Honduras Sept. 18-19, 1974. Most were drowned or buried in mud slides. It took Honduras several years to recover. The storm destroyed 80 percent of the 1974 banana crop. Most of the Honduran fishing fleet and the main facilities of Puerto Cortes, the most important port, were destroyed. Flooding from the storm drowned two-fifths of the country's cattle. The total damage, estimated to be about $900 million, was horrible for Honduras.

American Plot
There are people in Central America even today who are convinced the United States made Fifi a deadly storm. Their theory is that Storm Fury -- American experiments in seeding hurricanes -- made Fifi increase in strength and forward speed so that it hit Central America an unexpected blow. The United States experimented with dropping silver iodide into the storms on the theory this would shrink the eye. Cuba and Mexico complained. Here is text from a Nov. 4, 2001 CNN broadcast in which Correspondent John Zarrella interviewed Max Sheets, then director of Storm Fury. Sheets later became director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami.

ZARRELLA: But Storm Fury also had critics. The government of Mexico charged that tempering with hurricanes would deprive Mexican agriculture of rain. Fidel Castro fueled anti-American sentiment with accusations that Storm Fury would divert hurricanes into Cuba. And when Hurricane Fifi hit Honduras, there was immediate suspicion that American research was to blame, a charge that was laid to rest.

SHEETS: Fortunately for us, in 1974, when Fifi occurred, we did no flying into hurricanes, period. "


That full broadcast, which had some very interesting predictions about New Orleans flooding, is here.




Sunday, September 02, 2007

Fishing is Godly

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