Thursday, March 31, 2022

What Have They Done With Fuji Apples?

What has been done to them? - Where have they gone?

The matte finish Fuji, for several decades, was the most outstanding apple: sweet, luscious, crisp and flavoursome.

Then, onto the market, there came a different sort of Fuji with a shiny skin which was decidedly inferior - and today I never see Fujis on sale of either type in or around Sheffield or other localities..
They were often a lot more expensive than the rather overrated Pink Lady.
Today, I have to go to Spain to find them in local markets and even there, the shiny finish ones can often outnumber the matte.

Birdie.

 

1 Peter 3:4.

Slugs.

SLUGS FERRY FUNGAL SPORES: Slugs eat mushrooms and other above ground fungi as the cruise around forest floors. As mushrooms are the reproductive structures for the fungi being eaten by slugs seems like a problem for the fungi, but it is actually another piece of God’s brilliant design. More details and our comments here.

There Is Something Profoundly Wrong With Any Society ...

 ... in which 'the punishment does not fit the crime' - whether being too harsh or too lenient.

Parole Board UNFIT FOR PURPOSE!

 https://www.birminghammail.co.uk/news/uk-news/dominic-raab-calls-parole-board-23545231

200+ Babies Perhaps Killed By Negligence of Hospital Trust Causes Outcry BUT ...

  ... more than 210,000 annual abortions in the UK.

results in SILENCE!

Wednesday, March 30, 2022

Oh Dear, Dear EU.

 https://www.express.co.uk/news/politics/1587450/Brexit-news-Raf-jets-romania-eu-defence-Black-Sea-nato

The Beauty of The Lord.

Whither Hillsong?

 https://www.eternitynews.com.au/opinion/what-comes-next-at-hillsong/

Blogger: how about a total rebrand?

Dominic Raab.

 Blogger:

When the Tories take a real thumping in the May elections - as they surely will - Boris will be propelled out of office if he has not already gone before then.
Even now in the Ukraine crisis, with all of his better leadership skills showing through, 'Party-gate' is still likely to be the coup de grâce which, in one form or another, ends his tenure at Number 10.
You cannot overestimate the damage that a few ill-conceived parties during lockdown have caused the PM. Huge numbers who have lost relatives or friends to Covid are embittered and determined to punish Boris at the ballot box. 
Others, who detest politicos who see themselves as not having to follow their own rules they had put in place for us plebs, will also vote against him.
If he is fined for these breeches - it is most difficult to see how he can survive - and the damage if he does could be inestimable.

The problem arises when looking for a replacement. Rishi Sunak has soiled his nest with a wretched Spring Statement; rumours abound about parties; his disloyalty to the PM with his "I wouldn't have done that" remark - have all surely combined to cook his goose.

Liz Truss - always a slightly suspect character having once been anti-Brexit - seemed to have repaired this damage by bringing multiple trade deals into the UK but has now lost all impetus. She has failed to tame the EU over the N. Ireland protocols whilst lacking the courage to invoke Article 16. Add to this her reported half a million pound waste of public money on her trip Down Under and she is stymied.

Gove is unpopular. End of!

IDS is deemed to be as boring as Starmer. Maybe the country wants someone boring but it would be perceived as a risk to look backwards. (A risk I'd not be too unhappy to take.)

Pritti Patel? - Well, I like her but she has too many enemies.
Good-looking; hugely intelligent; finger on the pulse; measured; scores few own goals and not a 'wet' - Raab, the Deputy PM and Justice Minister, is surely coming back into the picture.

Incidentally - the pool of possible new leaders is reducing rapidly.

Birds of New Zealand.


 

God's Church - Not Those Many Poor Facsimiles - Must Tell The Truth Rather Than Hiding Away Like a Russian Conscript in a Foxhole.

 

This Is Not Controversial - Merely a Statement of Fact.

 

Tuesday, March 29, 2022

You Think Nations Retain Sovereignty in The Confines of The EU? - THINK AGAIN!

Spain and Portugal will both propose to Brussels this week a package of emergency measures, including a price cap on natural gas, in a bid to reduce the impact of energy prices on families and companies.

But Madrid and Lisbon will have to wait for the EU Commission to evaluate and approve the plans before any such measures can kick in.

These "exceptional and temporary" measures would have immediate effect on electricity bills, Spanish prime minister Pedro Sánchez said on Monday (28 March) when he announced the €16bn plan to cushion the impact of high energy prices on Spanish families and businesses. EU Observer.

Hmm.

 

Sin Damages Huge Church.

Hillsong's Atlanta pastor quits over scandals.

Jennifer Lee   24 March 2022 | 3:06 PM
Sam and Toni Collier(Photo: Hillsong)
The pastor of Hillsong's Atlanta, Georgia, church has announced he is stepping down in the wake of successive scandals in the Australia-based denomination. 
Sam Collier said on Instagram that the decision had been prompted by the scandals and Hillsong's management of them.
"My greatest reason for stepping down as Pastor of Hillsong Atlanta is probably not a secret to any of you. With all of the documentaries, scandals, articles, accusations and the church's subsequent management of these attacks it's become too difficult to lead and grow a young church in this environment," he said.
Collier was the first African American lead pastor at a Hillsong church and co-led the Atlanta branch with his wife Toni.
He said he "cried like a baby" after informing the leadership of his departure, but also said that he loved Hillsong and believed the Church would "get through this storm and come out better than they were before".
In another post, Collier added, "To be clear, we love Hillsong and the people in it. They are amazing people and have been good to us. CT.

Birdie.

 

Biology Cannot Be Ignored.

Boris Johnson says biology is 'overwhelmingly important'.

Staff writer   24 March 2022
(Photo: Pexels/Magda Ehlers)
The Prime Minister has waded into the transgender debate by coming out on the side of biology.
Boris Johnson said during Prime Minister's Questions on Wednesday that transgender people should be treated with generosity and respect. 
But he also argued that biology cannot be ignored.
"We must recognise when people want to make a transition in their lives that they should be treated with the maximum possible generosity and respect," he said. 
On the question of "distinguishing between man and woman", though, he said that "the basic facts of biology remain overwhelmingly important".
His comments contrast with those of opposition leader Sir Keir Starmer, who in the past has claimed that it is "not right" to say that only women have a cervix. 
"It is something that shouldn't be said. It's not right," he said on the BBC's The Andrew Marr Show last September.
Earlier this month, Sir Keir reiterated his stance by saying that "trans women are women". 
He was criticised by Harry Potter author JK Rowling among others over his comments to The Times newspaper. CT.

Russia Targeting Pastors?

 

RUSSIANS ARREST EVANGELICAL PASTOR IN MARIUPOL, UKRAINE

21 Mar 2022
Urgent call for prayer from Release International’s partner in Kyiv who says the hunt for pastors has begun. Release International.

Nigeria Imperilled.

Nigeria may become the next Rwanda, warns report into violence against Christians.

Julian Mann   26 March 2022 

Back To Trump Has To Be An Improvement - But Surely There MUST Be Someone Else.

The top 10 GOP presidential candidates for 2024, ranked:

Image without a caption
Staff writer
February 19, 2022 at 7:00 a.m. EST
Listen to article
7 min

President Donald Trump is followed by Vice President Mike Pence and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo at the White House in 2019. (Jacquelyn Martin/AP)
In the nascent jockeying for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024, it’s Donald Trump and everyone else. Or, if we’re leaning into this being a contest, it’s Trump, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and everyone else.
CNN poll released over the weekend drove this home. It asked whether people wanted Trump to be the nominee again, and about half of Republicans said they did. That’s not as high as it used to be, but it would probably be plenty to renominate him, if it held.
Then the pollster asked an open-ended question of the rest: If not Trump, then who? Fully 60 percent of those who didn’t want Trump just wanted someone else. Another 21 percent named DeSantis. And no other candidate got more than 1 percent.
How powerful
More than 10 months after leaving office, former president Donald Trump maintains a powerful hold over the Republican party. (Video: Zach Purser Brown/The Washington Post, Photo: The Washington Post)
Needless to say, it’s very early. People clearly haven’t thought about this much. But we will start getting a sense for where the activist wing of the party stands this week at the Conservative Political Action Conference, which will include a straw poll.
With that around the corner, we thought it would be a good time to dust off our quarterly rankings of the 10 people most likely to be the next GOP presidential nominee. Some of them will speak at CPAC; others (such as former vice president Mike Pence) notably won’t.
As usual, this list is in order of the probability of getting nominated — a formula that takes into account how likely each candidate is to run in the first place.
Also mentioned: Sen. Rick Scott (Fla.), South Dakota Gov. Kristi L. Noem, Sen. Josh Hawley (Mo.), Rep. Liz Cheney (Wyo.), Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, Sen. Tom Cotton (Ark.), former New Jersey governor Chris Christie and Texas Gov. Greg Abbott
10. Mike Pompeo: It’s not necessarily a telltale, but dropping a ton of weight and paying big bucks for media training aren’t things you have to do if your goal is merely to be a Fox News pundit. The former secretary of state and Kansas congressman is a good bet to run if Trump doesn’t. (Previous ranking: 10)
9. Chris Sununu: The New Hampshire governor broke some GOP hearts by declining to run for Senate; he would’ve been a major recruit in a key race. And since doing so, he has made some pretty interesting comments about the national GOP. He said he had been close to running, but that he spoke with GOP senators and found them lacking ambition. He suggested they were mostly interested in holding the line against President Biden. He has also suggested the party is overzealous in casting out anti-Trump Republicans. That’s, of course, a helpful thing to say for a guy running for reelection as governor in a swing state. But could it also be a national platform? Sununu in November demurred about presidential ambitions, emphasizing his 2022 campaign comes first. He’d probably be better able to massage the pro-Trump/anti-Trump divide than a lot of others on this list. (Previous ranking: N/A)
8. Glenn Youngkin: The other newcomer on this list is the governor of Virginia. Youngkin’s 2021 win in a blue-leaning state — and the conservative governance that has followed — are going to continue to be cited as a model for the party. And it doesn’t hurt that his move to rescind school mask mandates in Virginia preceded a bunch of blue-state Democrats doing the same (albeit without necessarily banning them, as Youngkin has). Plenty of battles lie ahead in Virginia, though, with a closely divided legislature. What’s next for Youngkin? Tax reform. (Previous ranking: N/A)
7. Ted Cruz: The U.S. senator from Texas finished second in the 2016 contest, and with that often comes something amounting to front-runner status the next time around. Except Cruz badly miscalculated (or, perhaps, he said what he felt) when he tried to make an anti-Trump scene at the 2016 GOP convention. He has since tried real hard — perhaps a little too hard — to appeal to the Trumpian wing of the party. But Cruz struggles from the fact that people just don’t seem to like him. And you have to wonder whether Trump supporters will believe he’s one of them enough to get over that hump. His groveling session with Tucker Carlson seemed to suggest a guy who doesn’t really know what his plan is or how to do anything except try to be whatever he thinks the right people want him to be. (Previous ranking: 6)

Sen. Tim Scott (R-S.C.) runs to a vote on Capitol Hill on Feb. 16. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)
6. Tim Scott: The U.S. senator from South Carolina is raising huge money — $7 million last quarter — for something which should, by all accounts, be a pretty sleepy reelection race. He’s also doing something lots of presidential candidates do before running: release a book. (Previous ranking: 4)
5. Donald Trump Jr.: This might feel high, and it might indeed be. But imagine a scenario in which the elder Trump doesn’t run. Who else on this list is truly ready to lock down a significant majority of Trump supporters? The obvious answer would seem to be DeSantis, but there’s some brewing tension between him and Trump (more on that later). Others either aren’t terribly Trump-y in their approach or have waffled on Trumpism. If the party wants a middle-finger candidate again, the next-of-kin might be an obvious answer for lots of casual voters. Of course, the younger Trump would have to run a campaign to capitalize on that. And he has less relevant experience on that front than even his dad did six years ago. (Previous ranking: 7)
Former vice president Mike Pence said Feb. 4 that he had no constitutional right to overturn the results of the 2020 election. (Video: CNN, Photo: CNN)
4. Mike Pence: Were it not for Jan. 6 and everything that surrounded it, Pence would be up there in the top three. Unfortunately for him, his refusal to go along with trying to overturn the 2020 election has led to an extended exercise in trying to massage the fallout. That most recent development: Pence saying earlier this month that Trump was “wrong” that Pence could have tried to unilaterally overturn the election — and repeating that the idea itself was extremely “un-American.” Trump, though, has notably declined to go after Pence like he has others who run afoul of him. We’ll see if that holds. One encouraging sign for Pence: Even though most Republicans wrongly believe Trump won the election, most agree with Pence that he didn’t have the ability to overturn the election. (Previous ranking: 5)
3. Nikki Haley: The former United Nations ambassador and South Carolina governor has, perhaps more than anybody on this list, struggled to decide whether she’s angling to run in Trump’s GOP or a post-Trump GOP. Most recently that has taken the form of her endorsing another South Carolina Republican who has struggled with the same thing, Rep. Nancy Mace, who was sharply critical of Trump after Jan. 6, before backing off. (Mace soon after earned a Trump-backed primary opponent.) All that said, we have long contended that when Haley can put it together, she’s a very talented politician. (Previous ranking: 3)
2. Ron DeSantis: DeSantis stays at No. 2 because of the poll above. He also stays here because, unlike many others on this list, it seems possible he might run even if Trump does — and could even have a shot in that scenario. Of course, that posture has alienated Trump. And the interaction between the two is understandably going to be a major subplot of the looming 2024 race in the coming months. Their relative receptions at CPAC starting Thursday will certainly provide some hints. (Previous ranking: 2)

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks with President Donald Trump at a 2020 event. (Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post)

1. Donald Trump: Naturally. That said, his No. 1 status is not as prohibitive as it once was. He’s also got some legal issues to worry about, and perhaps some declining GOP patience with making everything about 2020. (Previous ranking: 1)
WP.

Monday, March 28, 2022

Well. Satan Quoted Scripture To Jesus.

Putin quotes John 15:13 to hail Ukraine invasion at Moscow rally: 'The words from the Bible'.

Birdie.

 

We Believe in God's Love, Mercy and Grace But Must Not Forget His Wrath.

 

Er ... Yes.

 


Polish Christians in Action.

 Christians are living out Jesus' teachings as Ukrainians flee invasion.

John Hall   20 March 2022 
 Humanitarian aid supplies are distributed in to support Ukrainian refugees at a shelter just outside of Bialystok, Poland, in March 2022. More than 60% of the 110 Poland Baptist churches are responding to the needs of Ukrainian refugees.(Photo: Texas Baptist Men/John Hall)
(CP) With little more than the clothes on their back, hundreds of Ukrainian women and children wait hours in line to cross into Poland as part of the largest movement of people in Europe since World War II. They shuffle their feet quietly, even apprehensively, toward an unknown future in an unfamiliar country.
They're stunned when they arrive. Volunteers have taped Ukrainian flags in their car windows and signs in Ukrainian reading, "free rides to shelter."
The drivers take the refugees to the Baptist church in Chelm, only a few kilometers up the road where people from around the world — Poland, Latvia, England, the United States, to name a few — are offering a place of safety and security for a few hours, few days or as long as they need it.
Families sit in stunned silence in an impromptu reception area where church volunteers tell the refugees the church has free food, drinks, showers and places to sleep. The congregation even has a set-up children's area where they can play with bubbles or watch educational videos projected on a screen.
"What we're seeing is a movement of love and generosity across this nation. Poles are opening their doors and arms to Ukrainians. They are taking them into their churches. They are taking them into their homes. They are feeding them. They are caring for them," said Marek Glodek, president of the Baptist Union of Poland.
"This is what Jesus calls His believers to do all the time. Polish Christians are taking the teachings of Jesus seriously and living them out each day during this situation."
More than 60% of the 110 Poland Baptist churches are responding to the needs of Ukrainian refugees, many of them in dramatic and radical ways.
At a warehouse in Chelm, donations for Ukrainians are coming in as fast as they are going out to Ukraine and to shelters across Poland. The deliveries continue even after Russia intensifies attacks on the western portion of Ukraine.
In north Poland, church members installed new insulation, air conditioning, heating, electrical lines and beds in an old summer camp to revitalize it to house refugees. Before the work was complete, they were housing 46 Ukrainians — all from one family. It can now house 60 more.
The work is tough, but it must be done. "You just do it because it's the right thing to do," said Lukas, who is leading the camp effort.
Near the Belarus border, a church is providing shelter for about 50 people and sending supplies into Ukraine despite increased Russian aggression. The effort is led in part by Natasha and Sergei, Ukrainians who came to Poland 10 years ago.
"We didn't know why we were moving to Ukraine," Sergei said. "We knew it couldn't just be about money. Now we know."
Natasha calls her parents, who remain in Ukraine, twice a day to find out if they're still alive. After hearing their voices for a little while, she goes to work helping her countrymen. Between collecting and organizing supplies and registering people in the shelter, she moves quickly and calmly throughout the day.
"I see dread in their faces. I see their pain. I see tears in their eyes. I see the fear for their family they left behind. But I also see how much they feel secure here. When I hug them, they shiver with the happiness of being safe," she said.
"I feel like I've done so, so little. I could have done so much more. But I try to do everything so they know we've done everything we can."
With Baptists in Poland, Romania, Hungary and Moldova taking center stage, Baptists from around the world are playing supportive roles by donating supplies, providing additional funding, praying and volunteering. People speak English, Latvian, Russian, Polish, Icelandic, Ukrainian and more in the shelter.
Texas Baptist Men alone has committed $300,000 throughout the region to Ukrainian, Polish and Romanian Baptists, enough to support five shelters for six months. TBM has a team in Poland and is sending larger volunteer teams to serve in the Chelm church shelter near the Ukraine border.
"More than 1.5 million Ukrainians have sought safety in Poland," said Mickey Lenamon, TBM executive director and CEO. "Baptists worldwide have joined together to meet their needs. TBM is honoured to be part of that, whether it is through funding, sorting and loading donations in country, setting up beds, or even doing the little things that are needed like cleaning floors and toilets. We see what believers throughout the region are doing and are seeking to do likewise: follow Christ daily and share His love."
The crisis will have a long-lasting impact in the region. Families are divided as fathers and brothers fight for their country. Many Ukrainians wonder if they will ever return home or if there is anything to return to.
Until they decide, Baptists across Poland are providing a place for them.
"The faces of Ukrainians arriving in Poland have the look of total despair, but I see the love of God poured out by the Polish people and see hope and comfort shining through," said Gary Finley, part of a TBM team serving in Poland.
John Hall is the director of communications for Texas Baptist Men.

Bless You, Carla.

 Why pretend a baby has no humanity until it takes a first breath? asks DUP MP CARLA LOCKHART.

PUBLISHED:  00:22, 27 March 2022 

With the release of its new abortion guidelines, the World Health Organisation appears to have moved from issuing technical guidance to make abortions safe for women to campaigning for the most extreme of positions. 
Radical demands such as calling for abortion on demand right up to birth and allowing sex-selective terminations are driven by hardened abortion campaigners and enjoy virtually no support from the general public – and women in particular.
A recent survey for the BBC by pollster Savanta ComRes showed only one per cent of British women supported introducing abortion right through to birth. 
In fact, 70 per cent of UK women believe our current gestation time limit of 24 weeks is too late and should be reduced. 
The most popular time limit among women is 12 weeks, which would bring us into line with the be explicitly banned by law. 
Aside from where public opinion sits on this issue, as a mother who has recently been through pregnancy, I am shocked by the position the majority of EU countries. 
And nine in ten adults – 89 per cent of men and 91 per cent of women – think being able to abort because the foetus is the ‘wrong’ sex should World Health Organisation has taken. 
With the release of its new abortion guidelines, the World Health Organisation appears to have moved from issuing technical guidance to make abortions safe for women to campaigning for the most extreme of positions. Pictured: Carla Lockhart DUP MP And Chair Of The All-party Parliamentary Pro-life Group
With the release of its new abortion guidelines, the World Health Organisation appears to have moved from issuing technical guidance to make abortions safe for women to campaigning for the most extreme of positions. Pictured: Carla Lockhart DUP MP And Chair Of The All-party Parliamentary Pro-life Group
When I sat at my 12-week scan, I heard my son’s heartbeat and saw him for the first time. 
His body was already fully formed, with all his organs, muscles, limbs and bones in place. He could open and close his hands, move his arms and legs. 
Seeing the humanity of him there, even at that relatively early stage, it is beyond belief to me that the WHO is calling for abortion to be legal right through to birth.
Why has it taken such a hardline view which pretends a baby has no humanity until it breathes its first breath? 
A view that denies every single one of those not yet born any of the ‘human rights’ the WHO so loudly exalts? 
Disability rights activist, Heidi Crowter (centre), with her mother, Liz Crowter (left) and DUP MP Carla Lockhart (right) outside Downing Street, London, whilst a police officer delivers her petition of 18,000 signatures calling for changes to the abortion laws in Northern Ireland
Disability rights activist, Heidi Crowter (centre), with her mother, Liz Crowter (left) and DUP MP Carla Lockhart (right) outside Downing Street, London, whilst a police officer delivers her petition of 18,000 signatures calling for changes to the abortion laws in Northern Ireland
If one looks at the list of ‘experts’ it chose to consult ahead of issuing its new guidelines, a clue emerges. 
For the panel includes numerous individuals who work for major abortion providers or lobby groups, including two of the largest abortion providers in the world – MSI Reproductive Choices (formerly Marie Stopes International) and Planned Parenthood. 
It appears to have been written, to all intents and purposes, by the abortion industry. 
The WHO has allowed itself to be hijacked by these extremists. 
It should recall this document immediately.

Sunday, March 27, 2022

Final Test Match in The West Indies.

My opinions of current English test batsmen are simply unrepeatable.

The first time they encounter a tolerable bowling attack they wither on the vine.


Nice One, Dom.

Dominic Raab takes back powers to stop high-risk criminals leaving jail.

Justice Secretary set to introduce plans to override Parole Board decisions and avoid a repeat of Colin Pitchfork scandal.

Shame On You, Daily Mail, For This Immoral Jibber Jabber From A ... Well. I'd Better Not Say It!

  https://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-13300045/JANA-HOCKING-five-reasons-youre-not-getting-laid-dates-Im-guilty-two.html