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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: E who wrote (14787)3/10/2000 12:45:00 PM
From: Tom Clarke  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
Is Olasky Catholic? Something tells me he is not, but he often collaborates with George Weigel, who is.



To: E who wrote (14787)3/10/2000 12:45:00 PM
From: Neocon  Respond to of 769670
 
rickross.com

Group linked to Moonies sponsoring Bush speeches
The Arizona Republic / Monday, September 4, 1995

The New York Times

TOKYO - Former President Bush is planning to spend nearly a week in Japan this month speaking at meetings sponsored by an organization connected with the Unification Church of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon.

The organization, the Women's Federation for World Peace, was founded and is headed by Hak Ja Han Moon, the wife of the church leader.

At the Global Family Festival on Sept. 14 in the Tokyo Dome baseball stadium, Bush and his wife, Barbara, are scheduled to share the speaker's podium with Hak Ja Han Moon.

The appearance is being seen by some in Japan as lending legitimacy to the South Korea-based religious group, which has been accused of dubious recruiting and fund-raising tactics.

"The Women's Federation for World Peace is a widely known front organization of the Unification Church," Hiroshi yamaguchi, a Tokyo lawyer who fights the church's practices, said in a letter sent to the former president a few days ago. Yamaguchi said the federation often uses celebrities to lure people to the events, where church members try to strike up relationships aimed at soliciting donations.

Masako Ochiai, a worker at the federation's Japanese office, said the person designated to answer questions about Bush's visit was in China at the U.N. World Conference on Women. She said the federation engages in charitable work and is distinct from the church. A telephone number listed for the federation in Washington was disconnected.

James McGrath, a spokesman for bush in Houston, said he did not know how much the former President would be paid for his trip to Japan. The primary purpose of the visit is to appear at federation events in Tokyo and other Japanese cities, McGrath said.

Bush, who also is going to Vietnam and China this month, reportedly will receive a six-figure fee from Citibank for speeches he will give in Vietnam. Former President Reagan received about $2 million from a Japanese media conglomerate for an eight-day visit to Japan in 1989.

Bush's visit, which has received almost no publicity in Tokyo, comes at a time when Japan is edgy about unorthodox religious groups because of the poison-gas attack carried out by the Aum Shinrikyo sect in the Tokyo subway system in March.

McGrath said the Bushes know that the federation is headed by Moon's wife but are convinced that it is distinct from the church.

"We were comfortable with the fact that it was not a Unification Church-sponsored event," McGrath said. "They are not promoting any kind of cult agenda."

He said that the Bushes had spoken at a federation conference in Washington this spring at which the religion never was mentioned, and that other prominent speakers included Coretta Scott King and Barbara Walters.

"The sense the Bushes have is that these are about family and about building bridges of friendship between the Japanese and American people, which is something they wholeheartedly endorse," McGrath said.

These topics are what the former first couple will speak about in Japan, he said.


But at a similar "Global Family" festival run by the federation in Tokyo Dome two years ago, the main part of the proceedings was a two-hour speech by HakJa Han Moon extolling her husband, said Hiromi Hoshino, who attended the gathering.

Moon was convicted of income-tax evasion in 1982 and spent nearly a year in federal prison.

The program for the festival in September 1993 listed the Unification Church as a supporting organization. A guest speaker was Marilyn Quayle, the wife of Bush's vice president, Dan Quayle.

A poster advertising the Tokyo Dome festival does not mention the Unification Church. It states that the conference, with the theme, "Love will save the Earth," is about protecting children. Ticket prices range from about $80 to about $150.

Yamaguchi, the lawyer, said he represents a network of about 300 other lawyers who have offered services to more who have offered services to more than 16, 575 people in Japan who have been victimized by what are called "spiritual sales." In this practice, church members pressure someone into buying certain objects or making large donations on the grounds that it will help their family's karma or allow a deceased relative to rest in peace.

Although Hak Ja Han Moon is Korean, the 3-year-old women's federation appears to be mainly a Japanese organization, which says it has branches around the world.

In April 1994, the federation sponsored a meeting at Purchase College in Purchase, N.Y., that was advertised as "promoting peace and reconciliation" among different peoples. The program turned out to be one praising the Unification Church.



To: E who wrote (14787)3/10/2000 12:50:00 PM
From: MulhollandDrive  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
You seem to confuse "intolerance" with an "adherence" to one's own beliefs. You can certainly adhere to your own beliefs and tolerate the beliefs of others, certainly not mutually exclusive.

What I found a mystery was your reference to "social policy" and I asked you to tell me define it for me. That was what you stated. Not "social ethics". Do you have a problem with someone consulting an ethics advisor?

bp



To: E who wrote (14787)3/10/2000 1:01:00 PM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
acton.org

A better approach to fighting poverty
The Austin American-Statesman
May 14, 1999

Almost a year ago, Colin Powell, George Bush and the Clintons starred in the much-hyped Presidents' Summit in Philadelphia, supposedly promoting anti-poverty voluntarism. The folly of a top-down approach to engendering bottom-up programs was evident then and is even clearer now. "All hat, no cattle," as the old Texas expression goes: lots of talk, then few results, except an increase in cynicism.

The ineffectiveness of that approach, however, should not keep us from noticing a few positive anti-poverty developments.

Here in Austin, the Christian group CRISES is achieving results by emphasizing labor, integrity, faith and thrift. Across the country, some changes are occurring and some pioneers, like Robert Woodson of the National Center for Neighborhood Enterprise, continue to instruct all of us about the capacities for leadership that exist in many inner cities.

Ever since a book I wrote, "The Tragedy of American Compassion," received some publicity three years ago, some well-intentioned people have talked about "the Olasky model" for fighting poverty. I cringe when I hear that, because Robert Woodson was putting into practice in 1980 what I came to understand only 10 years later while wandering through historical data in the Library of Congress.

Mr. Woodson has now summarized his insights and experience in a new book, "The Triumphs of Joseph" (Free Press). He emphasizes the work of grass-roots leaders who understand that God, not Government, delivers people from imprisonment. He highlights contemporary Josephs who grew in their faith while struggling out of poverty, addiction or prison. He asks today's Pharoahs - leaders in both government and business - to turn aside from their advisers and magicians and forge alliances with these Josephs.

As an unconventional leader within the black community, Robert Woodson is well-placed to criticize bureaucrats of his own race: "As many as six out of 10 blacks with college educations hold government jobs the majority with the social service industry or with the education system. Because the careers of these service providers are ensured by a client base of the poor who are dependent on them, the self-sufficiency of low-income blacks poses a threat to their guardians in the poverty industry."

Mr. Woodson also takes on the Vernon Jordans of the world and contrasts them with many local Josephs transformed into true servant-leaders by God's grace: "people who had been in prison, who had infected their own sons with drugs, who had been prostitutes, people who all the experts said you can't do anything with, and I saw them transformed." I've had similar conversations, and it's God's grace working among some of those folks at the bottom and at the top that makes me hopeful.

It's important to be patient; changes of thought take time, and initial rejection should not leave us dejected. The apostle Paul's speech to Athenian leaders in Acts 17 proceeded swimmingly until he talked about the resurrection of the dead. That's when the meeting broke up, with some sneering. Others asked for more information, however, and a few eventually converted to Christ.

At a much lower level of significance, I had a similar oratorical experience early in 1995 when I spoke to several dozen conservative congressmen interested in the front-burner issue of that year, welfare reform. I noted the historical evidence concerning poverty-fighting by church-based groups and argued that a biblical strategy would produce positive results today.

The congressmen all seemed to be with me until I suggested that they take the lead by becoming deeply involved with church- or community- based groups.

Those who spoke up sneered: "We don't have the time, " they said.

I had lost them, and I soon lost touch with many of them. That's why it was gratifying to read April Lassiter's Congress and Civil Society, a recent Heritage Foundation report on Washington legislators who have broken from the pork-barrel tradition of constituent service. Instead of pushing to get more government dollars passed out, they have embraced an approach that puts faith-based and other neighborhood programs first.

Ms. Lassiter cites senators such as Kansas' Sam Brownback, who has spent time learning about the successful efforts of groups like the Topeka Rescue Mission, Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Wichita and the Good Samaritan Clinic. She describes the work of representatives like Pennsylvania's Joe Pitts, who has identified 200 anti-poverty groups in his district and found ways to teach them about marketing and fund- raising.

Some of these steps are small, but together they are worth more than summit sizzle. This is a hard spring ethically for the United States of America, but across the country, God is still at work, searing hearts.

Olasky is a journalism professor at the University of Texas.

Copyright ¸ 1998, The Austin American-Statesman



To: E who wrote (14787)3/10/2000 1:32:00 PM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
booknotes.org

From C-Span "Booknotes":

LAMB: You mention that you're a Christian, but you do in the book keep balancing the mention of Christianity with Judaism, the Judaic-Christian ethic. Why are the two mixed? And if I were a Buddhist or an Islamic follower or something like that, why aren't they included in a book like this?

OLASKY: Well, because the history, and what I tried to do was report on what I found in the stacks of the Library of Congress, and a lot of the groups were Protestants, some of the groups were Catholic, there were Jewish groups involved also -- United Hebrew Charities in New York. And one thing I found surprising, actually, was that they did pretty much the same thing. Even though there are significant theological differences, when it came down to the practical applications, they all thought of people created in the image of God, they all emphasized basic approaches of affiliation, thinking of people in terms of families and bonding, trying to actually set up a one-to-one relationship between a person who needs help and a volunteer capable of helping.

They weren't afraid to categorize people by values and seeing whether a person really wanted to work or did not want to work or was really interested in helping his family or was just interested in roaming around. They tried to be discerning in their giving. They all understood that the key thing was not just to give and have a warm, fuzzy feeling, but to give in a way that was effective. So regardless of the particular orientation, that's what they shared. I mean, they share an emphasis on employment, on having people find work. They share an emphasis on freedom, on trying to avoid certain restrictions that would take away the bottom rungs of the ladder and keep people from rising up. They all had a belief in a God who's sovereign.

Again, the different understandings of God, but nevertheless, there was the commonality, and when it came out in terms of people was that people have value, are not just material, people have spiritual sides. So that Protestantism and Catholicism and Judaism all had in common for the most part. Now today, you have big Buddhist and Islamic influences, but those were not there in the late 19th century, which I was concentrating on, and so I didn't discuss those.



To: E who wrote (14787)3/10/2000 1:40:00 PM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
By the way, I neither believe in the inerrancy of Scripture, nor in atheism, but I consider each equally plausible, and would treat adherents of each as if they were rational and capable of moral judgment........