About Me

Name:Tony Sacco
Biography
Loading...

Create Your Own Blog Find Other Townhall Blogs

Comments

Archives

Blog Search

Rangel, Democrats Propose Largest Tax Increase in History

          Can you believe it? In late October or early November Rep. Charles Rangel (D-NY), Chairman of the House or Representative's powerful Ways and Means Committee, proposed what, if it passes, will amount to the largest federal tax increse in American history.

          Mr. Rangel and fellow Democrats believe that the government doesn't collect enough of our money, and that Congress can spend it more wisely than we can. Curiously, in the past few years, I've heard several people express this same viewpoint. Usually, a quick question or two exposes them as on the left of the political spectrum. 

         Rangel's proposal will, among other things, resurrect that ill-conceived tax law revision back in 1969, when Congress took on the task of "equalizing the tax burden" of singles and married couples. Back then, many single taxpayers paid more than married couples. With a stroke of a pen, Congress implemented what became known as the "marriage penalty tax," which effectively although perhaps unintentionally, struck a blow against marriage and the tradional family. 

          The new tax bill addressed one problem, but in typical bureaucratic fashion, it created several new ones. It mandated that married couples struggling to feed, clothe, medicate, house, train, and guide their children had to shoulder a higher share of the tax burden than men and women who were merely cohabiting. 

          For 32 years, this unfair policy was the law of the land. It was on the books during the administrations of Presidents Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush 1, and Clinton, although periodically, someone raised the issue of fairness and attempted to revise or eliminate it. Finally, in 2001, it was overturned with President George W. Bush's tax decrease, bitterly opposed by guess who - Democrats. Yet, there's no better example of disdain for the family and traditional values than that legislation, which effectively penalized marriage.

          Now, Mr. Rangel's proposed tax increase seeks to re-impose the marriage penalty tax. I'm constantly amazed at the voters of New York state. Even with Rangel's tax and spend mentality, they continue to re-elect him and send him to Washington as their representative.
 
          According to James C. Dobson, Ph.D., founder and Chairman of of the Board of Focus on the Family in Colorado Springs, this is "only one of many ways by which Congress and presidents have weakened and undermined the family. An array iof harmful policies have invaded parental authority, allocated billions of dollars for safe-sex instruction in the schools, and refused to protect the institution of marriage from rogue judges - such as Robert Hanson from Iowa, who took it upon himself in August to create same-sex 'marriage' by personally nullifying the states' defense of marriage act! (An injunction was quickly issues and obtained, but not before 21 applications for gay marriage had been filed.) Also, Congress has left no-fault divorce laws in place, and has refused to grant parental consent rights when minors seek abortions."

         Writing in the October 5th issue of U.S. News & World Report, Editor in Chief, Mortimer Zuckerman said, "Public policy should not contribute to an a la carte menu of sex, [free] love, and childbearing. [Instead] it should emphasize the benefits for all from the package deal of marriage. . . . The stable family of two biological parents - surprise, surprise! - turns out  to be the ideal vessel for molding character, for nurturing, for inculcating values, and for planning for a child's future. By comparison, the children of single parents or broken families do worse in school, and in their careers [sic]. Marriage or the lack of it, is the single best predictor of poverty, even greater than race or unemployment."

          He is correct. At a time when many are coming around to that same point of view, it's amazing that the Democrat-led Congress does not get it. Speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) and Senate Majority Leader, Harry Reid (D-NV) have shown their true colors during the year they've been in power - and those colors are not red, white, and blue. These left-wing radicals seem intent on moving the country down a road which we do not want to travel. No wonder Congressional ratings are at an all-time low. 

Anthony J. Sacco, a writer, licensed private investigator, author of two novels; The China Connection, and Little Sister Lost, and a biography, Echoes in the Wind, holds degrees from Loyola College of Maryland and the University of Maryland Law School. His articles have appeared in the Washington Times, Baltimore Sun, Voices for the Unborn, the Catholic Review, WREN Magazine and the Wyoming Catholic Register. E-mail him at anthonyjsacco@hotmail.com and visit his website at www.saccoservices.com. To read an exerpt from his latest book, Echoes in the Wind, go to http://www.saccoservices.com/echoesinthewind.php.

          

         

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

The Golden Compass, an Atheist Diatribe, Flops At the Box Office

          It is liberal conventional "wisdom" that to boycott or protest a movie, book, or product only increases its popularity. That was BEFORE Christians began using the tactic to successfully combat the rash of offensive material aimed at them for the past 30 years by Hollywood, major media, misguided celebrities, and others, such as atheist radical author, Philip Pullman.

          On December 3rd,  I wrote a column sounding the alarm for Christian parents, about the release of New Line's The Golden Compass. (See A Warning to Those Who Seek to Raise Wise Children of God. Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials Trilogy: The Golden Compass, The Subtle Knife, and The Amber Spyglass, are Dangerous Attacks Against Christianity. See www.saccoservices.comhttp://wywatch.net/8.html, and  http://relijournal.com/Christianity. I was not alone. Many others did the same. 

          Despite being called such names as "fundies," and "right-wing ideologues," those to whom these warnings were directed seem to have responded, staying away from theaters in droves and getting their children to do the same. In its first weekend, although it did earn the #1 rating in the United States, Compass's box office take was a disappointing $27 million. Compared to other big-budget, "family-oriented" films, it was positively anemic. That had to be bad news for its financial backers.

          The movie has been doing well in such nominally Christian nations as England, Spain, France, and Germany. But that will not help the studio, because New Line sold off foreign distribution rights prior to releasing the film. In the United States, here's how Compass stacked up against the openings of other films of the same Fantasy genre:

Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire - $102.6 million
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban - 93.6 million
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone - $90.2 million
Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets - $88.3 million
The Lord of the Rings - Return of the King - $72.6 million
The Chronicles of Narnia - $65.5 million
The Lord of the Rings - The Two Towers - $62 million
The Lord of the Rings - The Fellowship of the Ring - $47.2 million
The Golden Compass - $27 million (estimated)
Eragon - $23.2 million
Bridge to Terabathia - $22.5 million
Stardust - $9.1 million

           From these figures we can see that J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter is in a league of its own. However,  Compass came nowhere near even the first Lord of the Rings, and made only a few million more than Eragon. That's got to be a major concern for Chris Weitz, the film's director, and its producer, Deborah Forte. It should be. Slashfims called the numbers  a "disaster." 

        Rolf Mittweg, president and CEO of New Lines' worldwide distributing and marketing operation described the opening week  as "a little bit disappointing." He is also reported as saying that exit polls were favorable and that he was hoping word of mouth would help the film in coming weeks, especially with school holidays starting. "It's all about longevity," he said.

        Maybe so. But if Mittwell's comment is accurate, then he and New Line will need a miracle. They've got a huge competition problem. Three blockbuster movies, including I Am Legend, opened the following week. Five more major releases were set for the Friday prior to Christmas, and two more were planned for release on Christmas day. That's a lot of competition. Based on its decidedly soft opening week, The Golden Compass is likely to have a difficult time surviving in theaters through the holidays. Indeed, its decline has already begun. On December 24, Reuters Entertainment Summary reported that, "I am Legend snatched the top spot at the international box office, ending the two-week reign of domestic dud, The Golden Compass."  And by the close of the week ending December 28, Compass’s ticket sales revenue was a mere $4 million, compared to box office leader, I Am Legend’s $34.2 million. 

         At this point, $100 million in revenue for a pernicious film attacking God, the Church, and Christianity, in a country where 90% of its projected audience professes to be Christian, now seems a long shot. $80-$90 million is more probable long range. That does not bode well for those who hoped to do movies of the two other novels in Pullman's offensive trilogy. And, it should be a warning shot across the bow for any who contemplate providing financial backing for this type of film in the future, that they can no longer get away with attacking Christians with impunity.

Anthony J. Sacco, a writer, licensed private investigator, author of two novels; The China Connection, and Little Sister Lost, and a biography, Echoes in the Wind, holds degrees from Loyola College and the University of Maryland Law School. His articles have appeared in the Washington Times, Baltimore Sun, Voices for the Unborn, the Catholic Review, WREN Magazine and the Wyoming Catholic Register. E-mail him at anthonyjsacco@hotmail.com and visit his website at www.saccoservices.com. To read an exerpt from his latest book, Echoes in the Wind, go to http://www.saccoservices.com/echoesinthewind.php.

                

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

Pope Sets Sights On Renewal For Mexico, Central & South America

Special to saccoservices.com

                           ________

  

PINE BLUFFS - Pope Benedict’s 5-day Brazilian trip in May 2007, his first pilgrimage to Latin America as Pontiff, signaled the Vatican’s initial move in bringing renewal to Mexico, Central and South America, home to roughly a quarter of the world’s Catholics.

His official purpose for the journey? To kick off the 5th General Conference of the Episcopate of Latin America and the Caribbean (CELAM); unofficially it was to address the Church’s challenges in that part of the world; the steady secularization of Mexico and Central and South American nations, and massive inroads into Roman Catholic ranks by Evangelical Protestant churches. Benedict is no stranger to Brazil. He visited there in 1990 as Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger.

POPE PULLS NO PUNCHES

Prior to leaving Rome, Benedict reportedly said that the exodus of Catholics for Evangelical Protestant Churches was “our biggest worry,” because they have enticed millions away from Catholicism recently. Believing that this exodus shows “a thirst for God,” he said he expects to develop a strategy to answer that call; guidelines for the faithful in combating this trend.

In a press conference high above the African continent 4,500 miles from Sao Paulo, he fired an opening salvo, laying down church law on abortion and suggesting he agreed with Mexican Cardinal Norberto Rivera’s recent pronouncement that Catholic politicians in Mexico City excommunicated themselves by legalizing abortion there.
       
Addressing an enthusiastic throng of Brazilian youth the day after his arrival, he challenged them to forego premarital sex and instead adopt a celibate lifestyle until marriage, and to remain faithful to their spouses thereafter. The next day, he called for a more forceful evangelization throughout Latin America to counter defections from Catholic ranks, punctuating that call by canonizing Brazil’s first native born saint, Antonio de Sant’Anna Galvao, an 18th-Century Franciscan monk credited with 5,000 miracle cures. Later, while visiting a drug rehab center, he spoke about poverty and other social problems, and warned drug dealers that God will punish them.

The Aparecido Conference

Opening the conference in Aparecida, Benedict set a torrid schedule for the Bishops while noting his “affection for your beloved people and my shared concern to help them be disciples and missionaries of Jesus Christ, so they might have life in him.”

In July 2007, The Vatican released a 130-page summary of the Bishop’s Conference, which Pope Benedict said “contained numerous pastoral indications, motivated by thoughtful reflections in light of the faith and current social context.” He expressed pleasure at “the priority given, in pastoral programs, to the Eucharist and the sanctification of the day of the Lord,” and to “Christian formation of the faithful in general and of pastoral workers in particular.”

Also in July 2007, as a happy follow-up, Archbishop Raymundo Assis, newly-elected president of the Latin American Bishop’s Council, stated that during his term he’ll concentrate the Council’s efforts on implementing the Aparecida Conference directives.

VACATION ENERGIZES BENEDICT

Pope Benedict XVI has just returned from a much-needed 17-day vacation at a cottage in Lorenzo Di Cadore, Italy, where he spent much time in prayer, study and contemplation. Although his straight talk is disliked by a secular media and tends to make certain elements uneasy, he is immensely popular with the laity worldwide. On July 11, the Feast of his namesake, Saint Benedict, the Alpine population of the Veneto region of northern Italy hosted a concert in his honor.

Refreshed, the Pope immediately threw himself into his work on numerous thorny issues. He’s addressing the breach of Eucharistic communion between Eastern and Western Catholics, which, an Eastern orthodox bishop recently said, “is a common tragedy and the quest for unity should be of equal importance to both.”

He’s also focusing on the Vatican’s emerging relationship with China. Earlier this year, he named Hong Kong Bishop Joseph Zen, outspoken advocate for the needs of Chinese Roman Catholics, as one of 15 new Cardinals. In May, he signed a letter to Chinese Catholics, part of which addressed Chinese authorities in a non-accusatory tone, citing a future reciprocal understanding that distinguishes political and religious responsibilities.

Amid all this, the Vatican will finalize plans for World Youth Day 2008 in Sydney, Australia, where 5 million turned-on-to-their-faith youth will congregate next year.

Whether Benedict’s Brazil visit had the desired affect - lighting a fire under the Episcopate as they attempt to end the slide away from God by Mexico, Central and South American nations - remains to be seen. But one thing is crystal clear; if it does not, the countries of that region may follow France and Spain into a vortex of relativism and secularization in which the voice of the Roman Catholic Church cannot be heard.

Anthony J. Sacco, Sr. a writer, author of two novels, The China Connection, Little Sister Lost, and a biography, Echoes in the Wind, is a licensed private investigator. Dr. Sacco holds degrees from Loyola College and the University of Maryland Law School. E-mail him at www.anthonyjsacco@hotmail.com and visit his website at www.saccoservices.com.  To read an exerpt from his latest book, Echoes in the Wind, go to http://www.saccoservices.com/echoesinthewind.php. 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive

A Warning to Those Seeking to Raise Wise Children of God: Philip Pullman's The Golden Compass, is a Blatant Attack Against Christianity.

PINE BLUFFS – Amid typical Hollywoodian fanfare, The Golden Compass will be released this week. It’s a movie based upon Philip Pullman’s book of the same name, written in 1996. Non-discriminating, uninformed parents will probably allow their kids to see it, since it’s being aimed at children and billed as a wonderful follow-up to J. R. R. Tolkien’s foursome, The Hobbit, Lord of the Rings, Two Towers, and Return of the King, and C.S. Lewis’s Chronicles of Narnia. But those who would raise their kids as wise children of God should act quickly to throw a monkey-wrench into Hollywood’s latest attempt to undermine Christianity, and Pullman’s grand design of turning children off to the God of their youth with this anti-religious screed.

I’m familiar with Pullman’s His Dark Materials Trilogy. One of these novels was enough for me. I haven't seen the movie, and do not intend to. As a writer myself, I know something about fantasy literature, so I can tell you that this author is an outspoken atheist, and the movie is blatantly, militantly atheistic. The book, although interesting and well-written, is anti-God, and anti-church. It’s dark fantasy at its best. Or rather, at its worst.

          There’s a bigger problem here. Most of the time, our modern media, many unthinking secularists, and even ordinary people, including some Christians, act as if God didn't exist (except for the so frequent, "Oh, my God!" expression, which spews from the mouths of mindless “valley girl” types). News reports and newspapers stories inform us about terrible disasters, but seldom say a word about praying for the victims. The accomplishments of athletes are praised, but the source of their God-given abilities is seldom mentioned, and athletes who call attention to their Christianity are often shunned. Current popular rap music? Well, we all know it’s a crude moral wasteland full of references to “cop killing,” and other violent mentions, “ho’s, “hookin’ up,” “shackin’ up, “momma’s back,” and other vulgar sexual references. Dramatic TV programs and movies tell us about what's important in fictional people's lives, but they seldom portray a character with a genuine belief in God, unless it’s to subject that character to ridicule. Recently, I saw a movie which I found hilarious and enjoyable, and it was so inoffensive that it is rated PG-13. Christianity Today said that it was a family-oriented movie, and it is. But I don't remember a single character who said a word about religious belief of any kind, or about going to church, or about accountability to a higher power for one’s actions.

It seems to me that this pervasive ignoring of the things of God is much more dangerous than occasional blatant atheism. We usually see blatant atheism, recognize it, and react to it. But if we aren't careful, we can absorb from the secular world around us, including, of course, the media, the attitude that God is non-existent or irrelevant. In effect, we might become practicing atheists.

Read what one misguided but perhaps well-intentioned book reviewer had to say about Pullman’s so-called Grand Trilogy:


I just finished reading this grand trilogy to my kids, aged 8, 10, and
12. My wife ended up sitting in on almost the entire series, and all of us were riveted from Oxford to the World of the Dead and back again. These books are incredibly ambitious: they set out to stitch together a religio-political history of the multiverse with deep, informed reference to physics, religious history, adolescent psychology, Nietzschean heroism, etc. etc. etc. The result, as I read it, is one of the most compelling indictments of church and state ever written for a broad audience. Author Philip Pullman concludes, without didactic hamfistedness, that the first purpose of churches and governments is self-perpetuation through maintaining the ignorance of their adherents and citizens. The greatest wisdom and joy, in Pullman's worlds, comes of full, mortal, bodily engagement with the physical world per se: with domestic comforts, food, sex, art, aesthetic involvement, work well done, craft, cleverness, etc. The well-earned consciousness of a human adult, earned through Blakean experience, is the crowning moment of all creation. Antithetical to this wisdom and consciousness is dogmatic narrowness, asceticism, monasticism, self-denial, narrowness of experience.”
      
Many have already noticed the offensive and destructive nature of Pullman’s work. On November 23, 2007, a Catholic District School Board in England pulled this and his other books from the shelves, pending a review and evaluation of the literary, not religious, merits of the books. A good thing? Well, yes and no.

   Pulling these books from the shelves of a religious school’s library raises the obvious question, “Why were they there to begin with? And any review of “the literary, not religious, merits” of Pullman’s work will be a mere exercise in futility, since it is precisely the anti-religious, anti-moral, anti-church aspects of this writer’s work product that is so offensive to Christians, and so destructive to Pullman’s readers, especially the  impressionable youth at which they’re aimed.

   Of course, although those in charge of public education today may not agree, I do not believe that youngsters of any age should be exposed to and indoctrinated by anyone who thinks that “there is no evidence for the existence of God.” And that’s one of the things so objectionable about today’s public schools; something which has created a nationwide movement to home school our kids in order to instill in them a knowledge of their religion, and a faith in God and Jesus Christ.

        It’s time for us Christians to counter attack for God and Jesus. Where Hollywood is concerned, one of the best ways to force them to stop attacking us is to hit them in the pocketbook. So, I urge you to refrain from reading Pullman’s books and seeing this movie. To refuse to allow your children to do so, also seems a prudent action to take, after explaining to them the reasons for your decision. For Christian kids, a far better and more spiritually healthy choice would be C.S. Lewis’s celebrated space trilogy, Out of the Silent Planet, Peralandra, and That Hideous Strength, so firmly grounded in Biblical truths and solid Christian dogma.

Anthony J. Sacco, a writer, licensed private investigator, author of two novels; The China Connection, and Little Sister Lost, and a biography, Echoes in the Wind, holds degrees from Loyola College of Maryland and the University of Maryland Law School. His articles have appeared in the Washington Times, Baltimore Sun, Voices for the Unborn, the Catholic Review, WREN Magazine and the Wyoming Catholic Register. E-mail him at anthonyjsacco@hotmail.com and visit his website at www.saccoservices.com. To read an exerpt from his latest book, Echoes in the Wind, go to http://www.saccoservices.com/echoesinthewind.php.

 

 

 

Email ItEmail It | Print ItPrint It | CommentsComments (0) | TrackbacksTrackbacks (0) | Flag as offensiveFlag as Offensive
« Previous1Next »