... to educate and motivate children of God to interact in our culture today...

Caught in a rut? You're not alone

Railroad tracks in Canada and the US are precisely four feet, eight and one half inches wide. Why this odd measure you ask? Well, North American railroads were for the most part built by British immigrants, and back in England they built their railroad lines 4 feet, 8.5 inches wide. But why were English railroads built this way? Because the first rail lines in England were built by the very same people who had built the country’s tramways, and that was the distance the tramways used. The tramways in turn were constructed this odd width because trams and wagons were being built by the same people, and so the wagon producers decided to build the trams the same width as their wagons.

But why were wagons this odd width? Because wagons any wider or narrower didn’t fit into the old wheel ruts on the country’s highways and the wagons had to fit into these ruts or their axles would break. So the question is, who originally formed these ruts on England’s highways? The Romans of course. Many of the roads across Great Britain were originally built by the Romans, who used chariots with a wheel base of 4 feet, 8.5 inches. They made the ruts and thus set the width of railroad lies 2000 years later.

SOURCE: J. William Pfeiffer’s Roadkill on the Information Highway

Why Men are superior to Women - a pro-life analogy PDF Print E-mail

by Jon Dykstra

What follows is the text of a brochure that was delivered to more than 20,000 houses in Edmonton, Alberta. It got a lot of people talking... and quite a number of them screaming. It turns out the title was the cause of their conniptions - they thought the brochure was an attack on women. Of course the title was not meant to be taken seriously, but when it was explained that, rather than being an attack on women, this was a defense of the unborn, much of the screaming continued. It seems humorless feminists are also pro-choice.

This brochure is not about why all men are superior to all women – such a broad generalization is unscientific and might even be viewed as sexist. No, in this brochure we are going to deal specifically with why Bob is superior to Susan. And in the process we will touch on why most men are superior to most women. There are four differences that make Bob superior to Susan.

  1. Bob lives in Edmonton and Susan lives in Calgary. This makes Susan inferior for reasons that are so obvious they don’t need explanation.
  2. Bob is much bigger than the diminutive Susan. Since there is less of Susan obviously she is less human – subhuman even (size is why most men are superior to most women, since men are generally bigger than women).
  3. Bob, as a mature adult, is more developed than the prepubescent Susan. Since she is less developed she is clearly less human.
  4. Bob is a healthy individual but Susan relies on a variety of medical devices to stay alive. She would die without her regular treatments and therefore does not rate as fully human.

 

Four differences in all, and in each instance they make a compelling scientific case for Bob’s superiority… and also for male superiority in general. Right?

You don’t agree?

Good, because neither do we. And yet people point to these same four differences to argue that the unborn are somehow inferior and less human than those of us are already born.

  1. Location – the unborn do live in a different location than us. But so do Calgarians. Does the fact they live in a different location make them inferior, less human, and less worthy of protection? Of course not.
  2. Size – the unborn are much smaller than us. Does that make them less human? If it does then the smaller Susan must also be less human than the bigger Bob.
  3. Level of Development – the unborn are less developed than us but that again is no reason to think they are any less human. If it is, then the less developed Susan is also less of a person than the mature Bob.
  4. Viability – the argument is often made that the unborn aren’t human because they are dependent on their mothers – they aren’t viable on their own. But newborns are pretty dependent on their mothers as well. And Susan is also not viable on her own. Are we now allowed to kill anyone dependent on pacemakers, dialysis machines, insulin shots or the like? Obviously viability doesn’t make someone more or less human.

 

In Canada we’ve justified the killing of over 100,000 unborn children each year by pretending that their size, location, level of development and dependency somehow make them less than human. But we know better than that. You know better than that.

We’re standing up for the unborn. Won’t you?

 
 
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