Father David Epps: Bishop David?

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It seems that I am soon to be made a bishop. It is a position which I have not sought, for which I have not campaigned, and, in all truth — at least for the past few years — have not desired.

Michelle Malkin: The Democrats’ unhealthy poster child abuse

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A few weeks ago, Democrat Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid lured two young children to the public spotlight to help him pass a massive expansion of government health insurance. Gemma and Graeme Frost, 9 and 12 years old respectively, were severely injured in a car accident three years ago. Their parents obtained government health care through the non-means-tested Children’s Health Insurance Program in Maryland. President Bush’s veto doesn’t change that — and there’s the rub.

William Murchison: A tale of two tongues

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Vamos a ver, as we say down at Bo’s Hardware Store. According to an ABC News “Good Morning America” poll, two thirds of Americans don’t mind hearing Spanish spoken as a matter of course right here in the United States.

Robert Novak: A choice for taxpayers

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WASHINGTON, D.C. — Back on their heels in a defensive posture all year while majority Democrats in Congress offered liberal initiatives, reform-minded conservative Republicans this week introduce the most sweeping tax plan since Jack Kemp’s three decades ago. It would establish a radically simplified, flatter tax for an estimated 90 percent to 95 percent of all income tax filers.

Rick Ryckeley: Cursed little sweet gum balls

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It’s fall once again in Georgia. Gone are the high temperatures and humidity of the long Dog Days of August and September. They are replaced with cool, romantic moonlit evenings and even cooler mornings.

Judy Fowler Kilgore: Finding Your Folks: Oops! Wrong Rawls family

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Boy, did I make a bad blunder last week. I just flat out lied to you. Didn't mean to but I made a statement that just wasn't true. For a minute there, I seemed to have lost my genealogy savvy and didn't use the genealogy cop-out as I should have done … you know those lovely phrases that allow you to speculate like crazy without committing and showing your total ignorance. Things like … "may have been" … "said to be" … "more than likely" … "probably" … and "possibly." There are more, as you well know. We all use them constantly when we're not quite sure.

Sallie Satterthwaite: Bad Luck

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What’s the old saying? “If it weren’t for bad luck, I wouldn’t have any luck at all”? Our outing last week was only about half “bad luck.” Could have been worse.

John Munford: If PTC enables Kohl’s, the west side will be lost

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“We don’t want to be like Riverdale.” “We don’t want to be like Newnan.” “We don’t want to look like Fayetteville.” “We don’t need a Pavilion (sneer implied).” “I moved here from the north side of Atlanta. The traffic there is HORRIBLE!”

Cal Thomas: Excuse me — all worship same God?

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Whatever else his critics say of him, no one can fault President Bush for failing to go the extra mile in his efforts to show that neither he, nor the United States, is opposed to the Islamic faith, or to Muslim nations.

Ronda Rich: This issue of family manners

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Karen and I exchange recipes often. She’s an excellent cook so I can always count on her recommendations.

Except for the tortilla soup recipe she passed along. It was okay but not particularly enticing. However, as is often the case when I cook something, I’ll call Mama and say, “I’m bringing you supper.”

Father Paul Massey: Ask Father Paul ...1010

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Answers to your questions about life, religion and the Bible

Pastors get some of the darnedest, most interesting questions from people in their churches and people they meet. Here are a few that I’ve gotten over the years of my ministry and via email since this column started.

Marvin Olasky: Two Cheers for the Bush Administration and Religious Freedom

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Reasons to be sad about the Bush administration abound. But here's a happy note: Team Bush has repaired its mistake on religious freedom that I and many others complained about last month.

Thomas Sowell: Random thoughts on the New York Yankees:

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The Yankee bullpen has some young pitchers who could throw a baseball through a brick wall -- if they had enough control to hit the wall.

Matt Towery: New Survey: "Religious Conservatives" A Shrinking Influence Among Voters

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A new survey of the five states that will hold caucuses or primaries prior to February's "Tsunami Tuesday" indicates the so-called "religious right" is a shrinking force among Republicans who say they will vote in their states' presidential primaries.

Judy Fowler Kilgore: Finding Your Folks: … and the Dormans fell from heaven

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Sometimes it just happens like that. The heavens open up and stuff is dumped right into your lap. God just smiles and gives you a gift. That is what he did for me last week. There is no other answer. It just happened and I am not questioning why. I have waited for more than a year.

Father David Epps: Ptc officals consider a bad idea

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For the most part, I tend to stay out of local politics. This is not one of those times. I read recently that Peachtree City officials met in a workshop to look at the possibility of changing division directors and the city’s fire and police chiefs to an “at-will status.” If this is ever seriously considered, it is, in my opinion, a very, very bad idea.

William F. Buckley: Religion Marginalized

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Pity John McCain, for whom everything has gone sour in the past period, taking him from lead candidate for the Republican nomination to the cellar. Some years ago, after hearing what John McCain withstood in North Vietnam, I pledged never to write a negative word about him, and over the years it has required very few beads of charity to stand by him. His latest difficulty started out sounding worthy of another medal of honor, to wear alongside the one he earned through the efforts of the North Vietnamese torturers.

William Murchison: The Comeback Of Paternalism?

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Mrs. Clinton wants us to be healthy -- depending, naturally, on how we define health.

Is it a matter just of knowing the federal government will get you in somewhere to do something for you when you need care of one sort or another? If so Mrs. Clinton may be your candidate. Her ideal is universal coverage: something for everybody, at an estimated cost of $110 billion a year.

Rick Ryckeley: One Way or the Other

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The ageless man was dark as a soot pot. Bent with time and circumstance, he walked down the abandoned railroad tracks unaware we were watching him. Or so we thought. Passing within three feet of our hiding place deep in the thicket of bushes, he paused for a moment. My three brothers and I had been throwing water balloons at his house all summer. Until now, we had never been caught. Not even close.

Emily Baldwin: Check out The Citizen's new Pop-culture podcast!

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If you are a fan of pop culture, be sure to check out The Citizen’s newest podcast: “The Citizen Popcast.”

Sports editor Michael Boylan and I discuss the fall TV lineup in the first-ever "Citizen Popcast," which can be found here .

Dr. David L. Chancey: The Power of a Well-Timed Hug

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Snoopy is having a hard time these days. In the popular Peanuts cartoon, Snoopy is agonizing over losing his doghouse to the new freeway that’s coming through. In a recent edition, Lucy unloads, “All right, so they run a freeway through here and you lose your doghouse. You think you’re the first one who’s ever lost his home? You think you’re the only one? Huh? Stop feeling sorry for yourself!”

Sallie Satterthwaite: Running with the gazelles

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At my invitation, several readers were kind enough to write and share their thoughts about surgery, pain and healing.

Robert Novak: Hank Paulson’s DNA

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WASHINGTON -- Eyebrows at the Treasury were raised last Tuesday when Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. named a major Democratic fundraiser to an important advisory role. On the next day, eyebrows were still elevated when Under Secretary Robert K. Steel participated in an event spearheaded by Bill Clinton's two Treasury secretaries.

Ronda Rich: The Southern Goodness of Fried Boloney

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Three friends and I were motoring our way from the western edge of Kentucky over to Louisville when someone proclaimed a sudden and immediate need for an orange Nehi soda.

Cal Thomas: The Jihad Way

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Dr. Esam Omeish resigned as a member of the Virginia Commission on Immigration after his anti-Israel remarks in support of "the jihad way" were posted on YouTube. He told a news conference that jihad has nothing to do with violence, but instead is about inner struggles leading to spiritual triumph. We've heard this before. Such explanations are presented after a terrorist act or a radical is exposed. Radicals also have been known to lie, especially to "infidels."

Judy Fowler Kilgore: Finding Your Folks: The rest of the Cochran kids

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We'll wrap up this Cochran family this week with some details on the remaining children of William Allen and Alpha Sophia Johnson Cochran of the McCollum area south of Palmetto. The Cochran land was in the Seventh District which straddles Campbell (now South Fulton) and Coweta counties. Land lots in this district are in both counties. It also is not far from Tyrone in Fayette County. Using today's landmarks, I'd say these Cochrans lived roughly in the Cannongate area (within a few miles of the golf ball water tower). They moved here from Newton County sometime between 1835 and 1840.

Father David Epps: Sports, Christmas, and the 2008 Elections

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A number of years ago, I went to a professional basketball game. After battling the traffic, searching for a parking space, walking an exhausting distance, and pushing through the humanity that flooded the stadium, I finally found my seat and prepared to thoroughly enjoy my very first NBA game sans television. Within a short time, I wished I had stayed home. The game, except for the last four minutes, had all the excitement of watching grass grow.

Larry Elder: Jena Six -- Another Story of Unequal Justice for Blacks?

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About the so-called Jena Six, reasonable people can disagree about whether or not prosecutors initially charged the Jena, La., defendants too harshly. The black teenage defendants stand accused of beating a white teenager unconscious.

Ann Coulter: Tase him, bro!

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Democrats should run Mahmoud Ahmadinejad for president. He's more coherent than Dennis Kucinich, he dresses like their base, he's more macho than John Edwards, and he's willing to show up at a forum where he might get one hostile question -- unlike the current Democratic candidates for president who won't debate on Fox News Channel. He's not married to an impeached president, and the name "Mahmoud Ahmadinejad" is surely no more frightening than "B. Hussein Obama."

William F. Buckley: The Mess in Jena

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CNN devoted an entire hour to the chaos in Jena, La., and rendered a considerable service. We hear, running through it all, the voices of critical figures -- the district attorney, the school principal and a school board member, the mothers of the defendants and of the victim, the outsiders. The temptation for this journalist was to seek to isolate words and events and watch the tensions rise, the ease with which despair made its way into the picture, creating a scene reproduced throughout the world.

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