From friar to priest; from earth to 20,000 feet up

He’s pastor of a S. Side parish in Chicago with a varied background including time as a Capuchin friar. The 20G feet up part, saved by writer Dolores Madlener to the end, is about skydiving:

You’re above the cloud line, and it’s extremely cold. The further down, the warmer it gets. You can see the crest of the earth and the Chicago skyline. It’s phenomenal. Went to classes for another three months, then some supervised jumps, then learning about wind velocity – it’s almost like flying a plane once you deploy. You get all that G-force against your skin, too.

It’s fun, and we use it as a fund-raiser as well. Eight parishioners went on the last jump, men and women. People make pledges for their favorite jumper, $5-$10 per thousand feet. I tried to convince [Chi auxiliary] Bishop Perry to go with but he declined.”

Looking up, it’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s Super Priest!

5 Habits That Will Make Grocery Shopping So Easy

To show that there is little of help to the reader that this blog does not offer.

The Family Dining Room

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Of the many household chores you’re expected to do, do you love or hate grocery shopping. The people who love to grocery shop usually do because they have learned to do it in an organized manner.  If you’re still pushing a cart down the aisle and stuffing it with your favorite foods without a plan for how these foods will be used or how much you’re spending, then you need to begin by shopping with a plan.

Planning

1)  Begin with a general game plan for the week.  What meals will you be eating at home? Devise a menu for the week and check your cupboards for ingredients you may already have. This will help you decide what needs to be purchased and when.  You may not want to buy all you salad fixings for the week as fresh produce doesn’t always keep for seven days.  Maybe instead, you will…

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Muhammad Ali, publicist extraordinaire

None better among non-chiefs of state, says ALEX BURGHART, reviewing Richard Hoffer’s BOUTS OF MANIA: Ali, Frazier, Foreman and an America on the ropes in Times Lit Supplement.

As Richard Hoffer argues in this rich and loquacious account of the Ali/Frazier/George Foreman fights of the early 1970s, it was Ali’s ability to make his bouts “part of a national argument” which enabled him to evoke such feelings. Frazier was no meat patty – he was an athlete of exceptional fitness, agility and durability – but while Ali the spokesman for black power and the Nation of Islam, Ali the conscientious objector to Vietnam, gave voice to the anger that many of his countrymen felt, Frazier was simply an apolitical funk singer for his band the Knockouts..

He also had a mean streak, viciously portraying his opponents as stumblebums:

Ali is perhaps the greatest self-publicist in history not to have held high office (“he would make a damned good politician”, Imelda Marcos said) and he succeeded in associating Frazier with the establishment in the public mind. Repeatedly claiming that white America would be cheering for his opponent in the hope that he would whip the draft-dodger, Ali called Frazier an ignorant “Uncle Tom”.

This cruelty, directed as it was at the son of impoverished South Carolina farm labourers, far overstepped the ordinary borders of pre-fight banter. (Ali would later perform a similar trick in Zaire, telling the arrival party that Foreman was “a Belgium” (sic), invoking – without basis – the name of the country’s former colonial masters). Hoffer does well to remind us of these indecencies which, like some of Ali’s more extreme views (notably his outright opposition to interracial marriage), have often been quietly sidelined in case they tarnish his legend’s sheen.

Didn’t know you could say such things about one of our favorite legends, who in many respects comes across as a race hustler and mere  darling of the left.,

Don’t Deny Islamic State are Islamic.

Defend the Modern World

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As I write, the Jordanian air force is bombing ISIS positions in Syria, ostensibly in retaliation for the Nazi-like killing of one of its pilots last week. A photo on the Daily Mail website shows a Jordanian patriot writing a message on a bomb in marker pen (an American tradition) before the vessel that will carry it takes flight. His message reads as follows: “For you, the enemies of Islam”.

I have a feeling Liberals will waste no time in circulating that image. After all, it paints a rather pleasant, reassuring picture. The insinuation is that ISIS (and by logical extension, all radical Jihadis) are just a deviation from the true practice and theory of the Islamic religion.

I’m afraid we must pour water on this hopeful notion. It’s not only wrong but dangerous to believe. Despite the claims of the majority, Islamic State/ISIS are entirely faithful to Islamic teaching…

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Chicago Tribune editorial has a bad Saturday

In Saturday’s editorial, “Obama, the court and the border,” Chi Trib has this at the end about what’s clear to the writer:(Italics added)

. . .  a couple of things. . . . One is that under a sensible, humane immigration policy, the people Obama would allow to stay would be allowed to stay.

Another is that this [Obama’s countermanding Congress, or not] questionable executive action could have been prevented if Speaker John Boehner had allowed the House to vote on a comprehensive immigration bill that passed the Senate in 2012 with bipartisan support.

Obama may have overstepped his powers, but he acted on the legitimate belief that our immigration policy was broken. It still is. The courts may not fix it. Congress and the president can and should.

What? The president believes in something and therefore is justified in overstepping his powers?

And anyhow, it’s the speaker’s fault?

This on an editorial page that delivers much intelligent, coherent analysis in the course of its work week. But not on Saturday?.