Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Ex-NFL Player/Major University Coaches Come To Inner City Dallas For Camps



JR e-Newsletter
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NFL and Major University Players/Coaches Set To Train Inner City Athletes in
South Dallas July 21st.

josh heupel

An incredible opportunity awaits inner city athletes in the Jubilee Community of Fair Park this July 21st. The event entitled “A Day of Champions” will reach 150 inner city kids from the age of 8-18. The camp, sponsored by the Greater Dallas Justice Revival and Heart of a Champion, will provide kids an opportunity to meet sixteen current college coaches and former NFL players who will teach youth sports and character development.

The “Day of Champions” is run by Josh Heupel’s 14 Foundation. Coach Heupel was the quarterback when the University of Oklahoma won the National Championship. Josh is now the quarterback coach for the University of Oklahoma.

Throughout the day, former NFL players share their personal stories of triumph in the midst of adversity and encourage the young people to strive for excellence in life.

Your help is needed to sponsor these inner city children. The cost per camper is $100 for the day event. Please consider being a part of this life changing event by making a donation today. Your gift is tax deductible.

The Greater Dallas Justice Revival sponsors events such as “Day of Champions” throughout the year as part of its FEED 3 program. The nationally known Heart of a Champion character development program is a major part of the FEED 3 program.

Please make checks payable to “Strategic Justice Initiatives” and designate the memo line to “Day of Champions.” Your gift is tax-deductible. Please send your check to: Randy Skinner Strategic Justice Initiative - 2114 Iroquois Drive Dallas, Texas 75212

Click here to see a list of coaches and players who will be training.

Blessings,

Randy Skinner
Director, Greater Dallas Justice Revival

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Monday, April 26, 2010

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Haiti Special Request

This is from a friend of mine and Tracie Gray Jernigan's former pastor/boss in Houston. He is now in Maryland. Please pass this on to anyone who might be interested.

Paul

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Haiti Special Request
Date: Thu, 14 Jan 2010 21:26:18 -0500
From: Long, Gary


Hello friends,

Thank you for being a reader of my weekly column, "Long Story, Short."  Tomorrow I'll be sending you the regular edition, but tonight I'm writing with a prayerful request for you to help the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship with their relief efforts in Haiti following the horrendous earthquake this week.  CBF has field personnel on the ground in Haiti.  First Baptist Church Gaithersburg, the church I pastor, is being called to aid the victims of the earthquake in Haiti.  Our mission partner, Cooperative Baptist Fellowship, has field personnel in Haiti and is challenging us to do four things:

• First you can pray: Prayer requests will be updated regularly.  CBF is updating prayer requests from Haiti at this link:  http://www.thefellowship.info/Pray

• Second you can give: Your gift will go to earthquake relief. Give to CBF online at www.thefellowship.info or give to your church and ask them to send along your offering.

• Third, you can get involved: If you want to help directly with response efforts, please let us know your skills and experience.  CBF is building a disaster response team and an application is available athttp://www.thefellowship.info/Disaster-Response-Application

• Fourth, you can stay connected: Read the latest news release,  updates on the CBF blog, and connect through CBF's Haiti ministry network's Ning site. That link is http://fellowshipportal.ning.com/group/haitipartnersforchrist .

This is one of those times I'm very proud to be a Baptist.  Members of the larger family of Baptists are joining together to do something bigger than we could ever accomplish alone.  Won't you consider participating in at least one of the ways above?  If you have trouble with any of the links, please respond to this email and I'll be glad to help you get where you're trying to go.

Prayerfully, Actively,
Pastor Gary

Monday, January 11, 2010

The Other Plot to Wreck America

By FRANK RICH
New York Times
January 9, 2010

THERE may not be a person in America without a strong opinion about what coulda, shoulda been done to prevent the underwear bomber from boarding that Christmas flight to Detroit. In the years since 9/11, we’ve all become counterterrorists. But in the 16 months since that other calamity in downtown New York — the crash precipitated by the 9/15 failure of Lehman Brothers — most of us are still ignorant about what Warren Buffett called the “financial weapons of mass destruction” that wrecked our economy. Fluent as we are in Al Qaeda and body scanners, when it comes to synthetic C.D.O.’s and credit-default swaps, not so much.

What we don’t know will hurt us, and quite possibly on a more devastating scale than any Qaeda attack. Americans must be told the full story of how Wall Street gamed and inflated the housing bubble, made out like bandits, and then left millions of households in ruin. Without that reckoning, there will be no public clamor for serious reform of a financial system that was as cunningly breached as airline security at the Amsterdam airport. And without reform, another massive attack on our economic security is guaranteed. Now that it can count on government bailouts, Wall Street has more incentive than ever to pump up its risks — secure that it can keep the bonanzas while we get stuck with the losses.

The window for change is rapidly closing. Health care, Afghanistan and the terrorism panic may have exhausted Washington’s already limited capacity for heavy lifting, especially in an election year. The White House’s chief economic hand, Lawrence Summers, has repeatedly announced that “everybody agrees that the recession is over” — which is technically true from an economist’s perspective and certainly true on Wall Street, where bailed-out banks are reporting record profits and bonuses. The contrary voices of Americans who have lost pay, jobs, homes and savings are either patronized or drowned out entirely by a political system where the banking lobby rules in both parties and the revolving door between finance and government never stops spinning.

It’s against this backdrop that this week’s long-awaited initial public hearings of the Financial Crisis Inquiry Commission are so critical. This is the bipartisan panel that Congress mandated last spring to investigate the still murky story of what happened in the meltdown. Phil Angelides, the former California treasurer who is the inquiry’s chairman, told me in interviews late last year that he has been busy deploying a tough investigative staff and will not allow the proceedings to devolve into a typical blue-ribbon Beltway exercise in toothless bloviation.

He wants to examine the financial sector’s “greed, stupidity, hubris and outright corruption” — from traders on the ground to the board room. “It’s important that we deliver new information,” he said. “We can’t just rehash what we’ve known to date.” He understands that if he fails to make news or to tell the story in a way that is comprehensible and compelling enough to arouse Americans to demand action, Wall Street and Washington will both keep moving on, unchallenged and unchastened.

Angelides gets it. But he has a tough act to follow: Ferdinand Pecora, the legendary prosecutor who served as chief counsel to the Senate committee that investigated the 1929 crash as F.D.R. took office. Pecora was a master of detail and drama. He riveted America even without the aid of television. His investigation led to indictments, jail sentences and, ultimately, key New Deal reforms — the creation of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Glass-Steagall Act, designed to prevent the formation of banks too big to fail.

As it happened, a major Pecora target was the chief executive of National City Bank, the institution that would grow up to be Citigroup. Among other transgressions, National City had repackaged bad Latin American debt as new securities that it then sold to easily suckered investors during the frenzied 1920s boom. Once disaster struck, the bank’s executives helped themselves to millions of dollars in interest-free loans. Yet their own employees had to keep ponying up salary deductions for decimated National City stock purchased at a heady precrash price.

Trade bad Latin American debt for bad mortgage debt, and you have a partial portrait of Citigroup at the height of the housing bubble. The reckless Citi executives of our day may not have given themselves interest-free loans, but they often walked away with the short-term, illusionary profits while their employees were left with shredded jobs and 401(k)’s. Among those Citi executives was Robert Rubin, who, as the Clinton Treasury secretary, helped repeal the last vestiges of Glass-Steagall after years of Wall Street assault. Somewhere Pecora is turning in his grave. Rubin has never apologized, let alone been held accountable. But he’s hardly alone. Even after all the country has gone through, the titans who fueled the bubble are heedless. In last Sunday’s Times, Sandy Weill, the former chief executive who built Citigroup (and recruited Rubin to its ranks), gave a remarkable interview to Katrina Brooker blaming his own hand-picked successor, Charles Prince, for his bank’s implosion. Weill said he preferred to be remembered for his philanthropy. Good luck with that.

Among his causes is Carnegie Hall, where he is chairman of the board. To see how far American capitalism has fallen, contrast Weill with the giant who built Carnegie Hall. Not only is Andrew Carnegie remembered for far more epic and generous philanthropy than Weill’s — some 1,600 public libraries, just for starters — but also for creating a steel empire that actually helped build America’s industrial infrastructure in the late 19th century. At Citi, Weill built little more than a bloated gambling casino. As Paul Volcker, the regrettably powerless chairman of Obama’s Economic Recovery Advisory Board, said recently, there is not “one shred of neutral evidence” that any financial innovation of the past 20 years has led to economic growth. Citi, that “innovative” banking supermarket, destroyed far more wealth than Weill can or will ever give away.

Even now — despite its near-death experience, despite the departures of Weill, Prince and Rubin — Citi remains as imperious as it was before 9/15. Its current chairman, Richard Parsons, was one of three executives (along with Lloyd Blankfein of Goldman Sachs and John Mack of Morgan Stanley) who failed to show up at the mid-December White House meeting where President Obama implored bankers to increase lending. (The trio blamed fog for forcing them to participate by speakerphone, but the weather hadn’t grounded their peers or Amtrak.) Last week, ABC World News was also stiffed by Citi, which refused to answer questions about its latest round of outrageous credit card rate increases and instead e-mailed a statement blaming its customers for “not paying back their loans.” This from a bank that still owes taxpayers $25 billion of its $45 billion handout! If Citi, among the most egregious of Wall Street reprobates, feels it can get away with business as usual, it’s because it fears no retribution. And it got more good news last week. Now that Chris Dodd is vacating the Senate, his chairmanship of the Banking Committee may fall next year to Tim Johnson of South Dakota, home to Citi’s credit card operation. Johnson was the only Senate Democrat to vote against Congress’s recent bill policing credit card abuses.

Though bad history shows every sign of repeating itself on Wall Street, it will take a near-miracle for Angelides to repeat Pecora’s triumph. Our zoo of financial skullduggery is far more complex, with many more moving pieces, than that of the 1920s. The new inquiry does have subpoena power, but its entire budget, a mere $8 million, doesn’t even match the lobbying expenditures for just three banks (Citi, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America) in the first nine months of 2009. The firms under scrutiny can pay for as many lawyers as they need to stall between now and Dec. 15, deadline day for the commission’s report.

More daunting still is the inquiry’s duty to reach into high places in the public sector as well as the private. The mystery of exactly what happened as TARP fell into place in the fateful fall of 2008 thickens by the day — especially the behind-closed-door machinations surrounding the government rescue of A.I.G. and its counterparties. Last week, a Republican congressman, Darrell Issa of California, released e-mail showing that officials at the New York Fed, then led by Timothy Geithner, pressured A.I.G. to delay disclosing to the S.E.C. and the public the details on the billions of bailout dollars it was funneling to its trading partners. In this backdoor rescue, taxpayers unknowingly awarded banks like Goldman 100 cents on the dollar for their bets on mortgage-backed securities.

Why was our money used to make these high-flying gamblers whole while ordinary Americans received no such beneficence? Nothing less than complete transparency will connect the dots. Among the big-name witnesses that the Angelides commission has called for next week is Goldman’s Blankfein. Geithner, Henry Paulson and Ben Bernanke should be next.

If they all skate away yet again by deflecting blame or mouthing pro forma mea culpas, it will be a sign that this inquiry, like so many other promises of reform since 9/15, is likely to leave Wall Street’s status quo largely intact. That’s the ticking-bomb scenario that truly imperils us all.

What Makes a Great Teacher?

Great article.

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/201001/good-teaching