Burqua
America, before you go to remove the speck from the eye of other peoples and nations, first remove the log from your own eye that is blinding you to your own deplorable moral, social, and civil state.

You have no right to point to the Taliban with their extreme practice of women wearing burqas, when you evidence an even more destructive and deplorable extreme practice at the other end of the spectrum in nudity and immodest sensual dress and behavior among women. You are hypocritical! You condemn one extreme, and practice the far worse opposite extreme. You condemn excessive erroneous modesty, and practice excessive erroneous immodesty, which is far worse! Read more

King Abdullah
Photo: King Abdullah, Saudi Arabia

Dear King Abdullah:

I have studied the Islam faith begun in your country and have read on your embassy’s web site the line of steadfast commitment each successive king has had in first and foremost preserving your faith. We here in America have our own rich religious heritage; but unlike you have forsaken and forgotten it, and this to our degradation and ruin. George Washington, our first president, wisely warned: “Of all the dispositions and habits which lead to political prosperity, religion and morality are indispensable supports.” Unlike your nation, we have not kept religion and morals first, but as in the original Garden of Eden have “listened to the voice of [the] woman,” and thereby have corrupted our own garden! Read more

Temptation cartoon
The answer? A lot!

Given the cartoon we see here from the 1911 issue of Life Magazine titled “The Temptation,” please allow a little highly revealing theology. As you can see, the cartoon begs it. And most certainly, there is more to this cartoon than the casual eye beholds—far more.

First, let us ask a simple question: In the beginning when God created man male and female, do you think His design for each bore any significance regarding the governmental relationship between the two? Was there an attesting governmental order in His design, or were His blueprints for the respective bodies of the man and the woman purely utilitarian? Read more

King Abdullah
Recently I received an e-mail from a journalist in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, who was asking me some questions relative to the news release titled, “Last Man Standing: Saudi Arabia.” Here is their e-mail and my reply.

Hi Gary,

It’s my pleasure to contact you.

I’ve gone through the breifs about your book “the curse of 1920” and the intersting article you wrote to saudis “Last man standing: Saudi Arabia”. You know that many voices are coming from US requesting Saudis to give more spaces for women. I’ve read your proofs about the mistakes about these voices.

I still have some questions: Read more

Pig
Have you ever considered the fact that Yahshua, the Son of God, actually came to this earth early, before the time of His triumphal coming? This being the case, one must ask the question as to what the consequences of this would be. And I warn you, that which is presented here is very compact, leaving out gentle helpful explanations, but gets right to the core.

The demons said to Yahshua when He was seeking to cast them out of the possessed men in Matthew 8:28-29, “What business do we have with each other, Son of God? Have You come here to torment us before the time?” This thereby raises a very important matter. It was incumbent that Yahshua came early, before the time of His right to reign. And in so doing, this had, and continues to have, highly impacting consequences and meaning for both Himself as well as the church. Read more

Frederick Douglas
It is said that history repeats itself. Well, here we are once again in 1870. In that year two women were fighting to keep the black man from having the right to vote. Why? Because they wanted the power that the black man was about to receive.

Does this sound familiar to today? In 1869-70, Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony vehemently opposed the ratification of the Fifteenth Amendment of the US Constitution giving the black man the right to vote. Before this, in July, 1848, Frederick Douglas had stood with Stanton at Seneca Falls in the cause of women’s suffrage. At this first women’s rights convention, he placed his signature on the Declaration of Sentiments and did not rescind it as did others. He was a close friend of the Anthony family, and often visited their home. In 1862, he even delivered the eulogy upon the death of Anthony’s father. Read more

Cartoon: The Temptation, Life Magazine, 1911
Read more about the cartoon

Part 3 of 3
But let’s now take this aberrant Eveonian social matter one vital step further. Let’s say that America wakes up and repents of her grave error and reverses this insane practice of coeducation facilities for young men and women and unnaturally extending education – then what’s next for them? These same young men and women, many who marry, will then go into a work environment equally ordered by the Eveonian women’s rights movement where men and women are placed together in sex-charged, glamorized working environments that are ripe for the occupational hazard of having an affair. Read more

Cartoon: The Temptation, Life Magazine, 1911
Read more about the cartoon

Part 2 of 3
In the opening, we noted that in order to see whether our founding fathers or we today are correct, all one has to do is look at the order of society at our founding as a nation and observe its fruit, then compare it with the societal order we have today and its fruit. The evidence is both obvious and overwhelming! Read more

Cartoon: The Temptation, Life Magazine, 1911
Read more about the cartoon

Part 1 of 3
Feminism has so much become an accepted part of the psyche of American society that when a man holds to the principles upon which this nation was established, he is instantly slandered as an archaic male chauvinist bigot. But a look at history during and since the founding of this nation reveals that we today have indeed become so subnormal concerning the proper order and place of men and women, that when someone actually becomes normal, they appear abnormal. All one has to do is look at the order of society at our founding as a nation and observe its fruit, then compare it with the societal order we have today and its fruit, and the evidence as to what is right is starkly obvious! Read more

FLDS mother and child

Photo: YFZ mother and child

According to Child Protective Services (CPS), of the supposed 53 girls between the ages of 14 and 17 who at gunpoint were forced from their homes at Yearning For Zion Ranch, 31 either have children or are pregnant. Rod Parker, attorney for the FLDS families, doubts those numbers. “I do have serious questions about how they are determining age in there,” said Parker, adding that the information from CPS has “absolutely nothing to back it up other than it’s coming from them, and they think we should trust them.”

Let’s say that another way, Rod: “And they think we should trust them?” We must keep CPS in perspective and call it what it is. May I be so bold to identify it based on the experiences of thousands of others—Child Predatory Services.

Read more

King Abdullah

Desert Kingdom Holds Fast to Refusing the Woman’s Vote

Photo: King Abdullah, Saudi Arabia

From America in 1920, to Kuwait as recent as 2005, this world has systematically witnessed nation after nation succumbing to the Curse of 1920, granting the Eveonian (of or characteristic of Eve) practice of women voting. Today, there is only “one man left standing” in this world, only one voting nation that has not relented to this dreadful Curse, and that nation is Saudi Arabia.

The World Fact Book of the Central Intelligence Agency reports that Saudi Arabia is the last voting nation to have not yet granted the act that, without exaggeration, should bring fear in the heart of anyone—women’s suffrage! Read more

Louisa Ann Swain

Photo: Louisa Ann Swain, Laramie, Wyoming

It was September 6, 1870, and a little old lady, now seventy, placed a clean apron over her housedress and prepared to go on two important errands that morning. Before she walked out the door, she picked up a little tin pail to take with her.

The streets of Laramie were dusty as usual, and the weather was beginning to change, becoming much cooler. At the age of seventy her pace was slower, giving her time to think. All these years as a Quaker, she had known the freedom of being equal as a woman in her church, having the right to speak or preach, and even to be an acknowledged minister if she had wished.

But the world around her didn’t move as fast in these ideas shared by her Quaker friends. There were others who felt as she, like the passionate Quaker sister she had heard about who was beginning to get a lot of attention—Susan B. Anthony. Anthony was demanding equal rights with men, even the equal right to vote! Just the year before, Anthony had joined with Elizabeth Cady Stanton and formed the National Women’s Suffrage Association. Can you imagine, she thought, a national women’s suffrage association! Read more

CPS investigator Angie Voss

Photo: CPS investigator Angie Voss

At the outset of this entire debacle surrounding the raid of the Yearning For Zion FLDS community, Child Protective Services (CPS) spokeswoman Marleigh Meisner stated, “This is about children who are at imminent risk of harm, children that we believe have been abused and neglected.” This was only the beginning of the numerous duplicitous statements to be made as this melee of activity has unfolded for a heretofore simple and exceedingly quiet community that has been reluctantly drug into the spotlight. CPS and like critics take a position of judging supposed wrong, yet effect all the more unjust wrong.

Read more

Marie, mother of three boys

Photo: Marie, mother of three boys

“The death penalty of family law cases.” This is how the events unfolding for 416 children and their now-separated mothers were described as the State of Texas and Child Protective Services (CPS) mount their largest single attack ever on families. After being forcibly removed from their homes at gunpoint and then through deceit and lies separated from their children, these crying and now-untrusting mothers deprived of any parting contact with their children were given the choice—go to a women’s shelter or go back to your homes. “Your children are ours,” said CPS.

Read more

Armed Raid of YFZ

Photo: Armed raid of YFZ Ranch

You can always know when someone is doing wrong when they have to exaggerate the facts in order to justify their actions, e.g., Waco, Texas, 1993. When you read the accounts of what is taking place surrounding the Yearning For Zion Ranch near Eldorado, Texas, reporters cannot call it a ranch or community, they cannot call the people mere members or residents or congregants, or say they are a group immersed in strict religious principles; but instead, they have to use inciting words such as cultists, clan, the compound, sect, fear, cyanide document, renegade. Clearly, the reporters are on a witch-hunt and purpose to demonize the group and place it in a notoriously bad light—calling into question the intentions and purposes of both the raid and the reporting.

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Elizabeth Cady Stanton

Photo: Elizabeth Cady Stanton

When the first press release went out announcing the publication of The Curse of 1920: The Degradation of Our Nation in the Last 100 Years, I was surprised to receive a reply from Coline Jenkins, the great-great granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Of course Stanton is the 19th century suffragist and godmother of the women’s rights movement who befriended, inspired, instructed, and labored with Susan B. Anthony.

Despite several attempts to reply to Jenkins’s comments, all efforts to contact her failed. But, her comments and question raise some very important points, and show the great fallacy of this Eveonian movement. Hopefully this article will somehow find its way to her.

Read more

Finally, conservative commentator Ann Coulter has someone to agree with her after making her outlandish comment regarding her “pipe dream” that we take “away women’s right to vote.” Yes, there is now a book out that espouses this same prescription. With its equally controversial message, it has the intriguing title, “The Curse of 1920,” and is authored by former advocate for the poor, Gary D. Naler.

As if stirring up the dead, the publication of this book even provoked the great-great granddaughter of Elizabeth Cady Stanton, 19th century suffragist and godmother of women’s rights who is often quoted and cited in the book, to ask: Who is this Gary Naler.

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