V: "People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people."
Welcome Back The Spotlight 'O Terror
Green - Low: This setting is here just as a reference point. DHS will never use it because it would mean we didn’t need them anymore.
Blue - Guarded: This rarely used setting on the Stoplight ‘O Terror could indicate things like an undocumented worker within 3 square miles of the president.
Yellow - Elevated: This is the standard level of fear. Don’t expect to see anything lower than this as long as the Regressives are in office. Be scared, but not too scared to vote Republican.
Orange - High: Chertoff heard that someone in the CIA’s brother’s boss’ nephew’s sister-in-law heard about a plan to blow up Amish Country Popcorn Factory in Berne Indiana. It’s ok to pee your pants at this level.
Red - Severe: A terror attack was recently narrowly averted. We can’t release any details but just be thankful we saved your asses. Used frequently before midterm elections. See October Surprise. (Oh My God, Take Away My Freedoms and Protect Me From Them There Terrorists, Like Osama Hussein!!!)
Welcome to my Blog, enjoy your stay!
Congressman Ron Paul, MD - We've Been NeoConned

1984 radio broadcast:
Pastor David WhitneyFRED DE SAM LAZARO, anchor: Few issues touch a raw nerve in American politics like gun control. It could be one reason the debate is rarely waged from pulpits. But often the issue is not far below the surface in worship communities—particularly those hit by gun violence, as correspondent Lucky Severson tells us in this report.
LUCKY SEVERSON reporting: And your son was killed right over here?
Ms. JACKIE ROWE ADAMS (Harlem Mothers S.A.V.E.): And my son was killed right there on the steps where my parents was living. I left him that morning. He said, “Ma.” Gave me a kiss. He was 17 at the time. And, I mean, you would never imagine that he wasn’t coming back home.
SEVERSON: Jackie Rowe Adams belongs to a New York City group of women called Harlem Mothers S.A.V.E. Their purpose is to stop gun violence. Those who belong have paid a very dear price. Each had at least one child killed by guns in Harlem.
Ms. ROWE ADAMS: Eighteen years later, who would’ve ever imagined that I would lose another child to gun violence? A 13 year old killed my son—robbery. From what I understand it was robbery. Shot him one time in the head.
SEVERSON: Like many of the 41 murders in Harlem last year, most were committed with illegal guns, double the gun deaths from a year before.
Unidentified Woman: Because we were out here last summer and saw a shoot out right on the corner like it was the OK Corral.
SEVERSON: When her sons were killed, Jackie says at first she was angry with God but now she credits God for transforming her anger into a cause.
Ms. ROWE ADAMS: I woke up one morning and I said, No! Enough is enough!' My husband said,What’s the matter?’ I said, I can't take it.' I said,What is the elected officials doing? What is the churches doing?’
SEVERSON: The influential Riverside Church on Harlem’s west side is trying to do something. Jackie met with Reverend Arnold Thomas to offer her group’s help. He’s registering churches around the country to participate in a God Not Guns Sabbath the weekend of September 29th and 30th.
Reverend ARNOLD THOMAS (The Riverside Church): Americans need to have a serious conversation about how guns have contributed to, really, the destruction and the continuing demise of our way of life and our culture.
SEVERSON: Approximately 30,000 Americans are killed every year by gun violence, including homicides, suicides and accidental gun deaths.
Rev. THOMAS: We’re dealing with staggering statistics. And so that says to me that America is a nation at war. We are at war with ourselves.
SEVERSON: Why have churches been so conspicuously silent on this subject?
Rev. THOMAS: I think because churches are also political animals, and we are—we are subject to the fact that many of our parishioners advocate the use of guns.
SEVERSON: Pastor David Whitney ministers the Cornerstone Evangelical Free Church in Maryland. He says the American public would be surprised at how many pastors have a different view of guns from that of Reverend Thomas. They favor them.
Pastor DAVID WHITNEY (Cornerstone Evangelical Free Church): I would say the churches should be involved in helping arm and train people to use handguns effectively.
SEVERSON: Why would you need a gun?
Pastor WHITNEY: As soon as a handgun appears, it never even has to be used. The criminal’s a coward and he’s going to flee as soon as he recognizes he’s faced with an equal power with himself.
SEVERSON: Can you understand how some might find a pastor advocating that we all carry guns at least offensive?
Pastor WHITNEY: Some would. I know that in my congregation none would, because they understand that we have the biblical right of self-defense. Jesus said, `If you don’t have a sword, go buy one’ for the purpose of self-defense.
SEVERSON: Do you think ministers should carry guns?
Ms. MARCIA OWEN (Religious Coalition for a Nonviolent Durham): I think that that would be very counter to the message of Christ.
SEVERSON: Marcia Owen is with the Religious Coalition for a Nonviolent Durham, which is affiliated with about 60 local churches. She organizes vigils for the victims of gun violence in her North Carolina city.
This is a vigil for 14-year old Tavisa Cartnail, who was shot and killed in a drive-by.
Unidentified Man: She was a nice, nice young lady.
Unidentified Woman: Some of us did not know Tavisa. But we learned about her when she became a statistic.
SEVERSON: The mother, still mourning, did not attend the vigil, but her friend Sheryl Smith was there, and she understands the grief.
Ms. SHERYL SMITH: My son was murdered in November 2005 in a drive-by.
SEVERSON: Each year Durham averages about 30 murders, and Marcia tries to hold a vigil after each one.
Ms. OWEN: The reason that we do those is we truly believe that, before we do any advocacy or policy work, that we first must do the most important thing, which is to stop, to gather at the site of the homicide, and to witness to the sanctity of life and to mourn.
SEVERSON: The Durham neighborhoods, where many gun murders take place, are comprised mainly of African-Americans.
Ms. OWEN: If this were my child and my neighborhood, would this continue on? I don’t think so. I know it wouldn’t. Something would be done. But these communities are almost like invisible communities to us.
SEVERSON: Marcia’s coalition gets involved with the inner-city community by meeting with low-income kids, urging them to stay away from guns, and also working closely with former inmates, who are often the perpetrators and then the targets of gun violence in the inner cities. Peter Lamonte Bell has been working at and advancing in the city’s Water Department ever since he got out of prison two years ago. He was in on drug and gun convictions.
If I—say I wanted to get a gun here in Durham, how long would it take me to get it?
Mr. PETER LAMONTE BELL: A couple of hours. I’ve never been to a gun store in my life and bought a gun. It always come from the street. A lot of the guns that are on the street, they’re coming right from citizen’s homes, because you have citizens that have firearms.
SEVERSON: He says most inmates are not prepared to come out of prison. And without a lot of support, many end up back dealing drugs and using guns. So the coalition’s faith team helps people like Peter get jobs and housing and their lives back together. They meet regularly.
Mr. BELL: I guess I had the same problem that every citizen has now, and it’s paying bills and being broke. But it ain’t so bad. These are God-fearing, -loving people that care—that’s reaching out to try and help you. And so, it’s nothing that I won’t bring to my faith team. And if something really serious that is brought on me, I say, `Look, we need to have a meeting.’
SEVERSON: Marcia Owen says the North Carolina legislature has blocked every effort at gun control.
You are not looking to get rid of guns?
Ms. OWEN: No, not at all. I’m not—no. I’m not an abolitionist.
SEVERSON: But her objective would undoubtedly require some measures of gun control, which Pastor Whitney strongly opposes.
Pastor WHITNEY: Well, the answer to the problem really isn’t to say, `We’re going to disarm the law-abiding citizens.’ Because then you make them vulnerable to murder. The answer to the rate of violence in America is the full preaching of the gospel of Jesus Christ, which changes the heart of men from sinners who disobey God’s law—“Thou shall not kill”—to disciples of Jesus Christ who obey God’s law.
SEVERSON: That’s what Jackie Rowe Adams and her group is all about—getting rid of illegal guns by giving the NYPD information about stores or storefronts they suspect are dealing in illegal guns.
You’ve helped close down some of these businesses around here that have been dealing in illegal guns, right?
Ms. ROWE ADAMS: Yes we have. Yes we have.
SEVERSON: But that must be a little dangerous for you?
Ms. ROWE ADAMS: It is dangerous. But the danger is when kids get their hands on these guns, they’re taking a life. So if I could help close down some of these illegal places, then my living will not be in vain.
SEVERSON: The church involvement she was hoping for is finally taking shape, and not only in Harlem. It’s not an effort to get rid of guns but to keep them out of the wrong hands. But they face an uphill battle convincing churchgoers that guns issues should been given a higher priority from the pulpit.
For RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY, I’m Lucky Severson in Harlem.