Thursday, 7 May 2009

Wednesday, May 06, 2009

Obama A No-Show for National Prayer Day


You're surprised??

President Obama is distancing himself from the National Day of Prayer by nixing a formal early morning service and not attending a large Catholic prayer breakfast the next morning. 

All Mr. Obama will do for the National Day of Prayer, which is Thursday, is sign a proclamation honoring the day, which originated in 1952 when Congress set aside the first Thursday in May for the observance. 

For the past eight years, President George W. Bush invited selected Christian and Jewish leaders to the White House East Room, where he typically would give a short speech and several leaders offered prayers. 

Obama White House press secretary Robert Gibbs said Tuesday that the president is simply reverting back to pre-Bush administration practice.


Of course mushmouth negelected to mention the speeches given and the events pre-Bush presidents have attended, but hey, who's counting? Presidnt Obama, after all, was the man who loudly proclaimed to the Muslim world that we're not a Christian nation and bowed like a supplicant to the keeper of the holy sites in Mecca. 

And as for that Catholic breakfast - did you really expect a man who embraces infanticide to attend?

Since Rev Wright is a little too radioactive these days, the President's public interaction with Judeo-Christian religion has been limited to a bogus 'liberation theology' type Passover seder attended by a few Jewish political supporters who's level of religious observance can be gauged by the fact that the White House kitchen didn't even bother to serve kosher food.Although I'm sure we'll see a better show and more care taken when the Muslim Eid rolls around.

Perhaps the real problem the President has with National Prayer Day is that as he sees it, the people observing it are simply praying to the wrong diety.




Quote Of The Day...


"I always cheer up immensely if an attack is particularly wounding because I think, well, if they attack one personally, it means they have not a single political argument left."



Margaret Thatcher

(Lady Thatcher became Britain's first female Prime Minister - thirty years ago this week)

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