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	<title>New Life Cathedral: Site News</title>
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	<dc:date>2012-05-20T22:12:35-05:00</dc:date>
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		<item>
			<title>Financial fast </title>
			<link>http://www.newlifecathedral.net/n/financial_fast.html</link>
			<description></description>
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  			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>Debit is slavery</div> <p>
	You need to spend at least one week a month fasting financially this is how you do it:</p>
<p>
	Start off by doing a Budget. This will let you know what CASH you will have to spend.</p>
<p>
	DO&#39;s<br />
	You may purchase the following:</p>
<p>
	Food and medication<br />
	Hygiene products<br />
	Clothing items that are required for your job, such as pantyhose, work shirts or a uniform. Make do with the clothing you own.<br />
	Essential items for your family, such as school supplies<br />
	Essential items for your home, such as cleaning products. Sheets, pillows, lamps, curtains, etc. are not essentials<br />
	DON&#39;Ts</p>
<p>
	You will not shop or use your credit cards. Use cash.<br />
	For these 5 days you must refrain from buying anything that is not necessity. And by necessity, I mean the bare essentials, such as food and medicine.<br />
	You will refrain from going to the mall or retail stores. Even window shopping is off limits.<br />
	Children should not hang out at the mall<br />
	Don&#39;t shop on-line<br />
	No restaurant meals - fast food or otherwise. This includes buying breakfast or lunch at work. You can&#39;t stop for coffee; make it at home instead.<br />
	No spending money on entertainment, including movies.<br />
	You are not permitted to buy gifts or gift cards; this means you don&#39;t delay giving thinking after the 5 days you give a belated gift. No, give of yourself, make something or re-gift.<br />
	Don&#39;t allow yourself to buy things you know you shouldn&#39;t. Be accountable to yourself.</p>
<p>
	Meditate on the following scriptures:</p>
<p>
	Exodus 22: 14 - Proverbs 22: 7 - Matthew 25: 14-20 - Malachi 3:10<br />
	&nbsp;</p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<dc:subject></dc:subject>
			<dc:date>2011-04-04T00:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
			 

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		<item>
			<title>New use of conference calling</title>
			<link>http://www.newlifecathedral.net/n/new_use_of_conference_calling.html</link>
			<description></description>
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  			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>maturity and bible study conferences</div> I want to invite you all to join me&nbsp;tuesdays at 12pm for one hour of new members class. This class is for those of you that can not make monday nights and those who need review. I will cover less material&nbsp;so it wll take a little longer to finish all sessions. Also, we will be live on most wednesdays for bible study. However, you can listen to&nbsp;a recording of bible study for the next 6 days following that weeks bible study.<br />
<br />
conference # 712-432-0080&nbsp; access code 254216#<br />
play back # 712-432-1590&nbsp; same access code&nbsp;]]></content:encoded>
			<dc:subject></dc:subject>
			<dc:date>2009-08-12T00:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
			 

		</item>
		<item>
			<title>War on the poor!</title>
			<link>http://www.newlifecathedral.net/n/wae_on_the_poor.html</link>
			<description></description>
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  			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>The real  housing boom</div> <p>
	The Prison Boom Comes Home to Roost<br />
	<br />
	By James Carroll | November 8, 2010<br />
	<br />
	The Boston Globe<br />
	<br />
	<a href="http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2010/11/08/the_prison_boom_comes_home_to_roost/" target="_blank">http://www.boston.<wbr>com/bostonglobe/<wbr>editorial_<wbr>opinion/oped/<wbr>articles/<wbr>2010/11/08/<wbr>the_prison_<wbr>boom_comes_<wbr>home_to_roost/</wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></a><wbr><wbr><wbr><wbr><wbr><wbr><wbr><wbr><br />
	<br />
	WILL THE fiscal collapse that has laid bare gross<br />
	inequalities in the US economic system lead to<br />
	meaningful reforms toward a more just society? One<br />
	answer is suggested by the bursting of what might be<br />
	called the &quot;other housing bubble,&#39;&#39; for these two years<br />
	have also brought to crisis the three-decade-<wbr>long<br />
	frenzy of mass imprisonment. If there was a bailout for<br />
	bankers, can there be one for inmates?<br />
	<br />
	It is commonly observed now that, beginning about 1981,<br />
	during the Reagan administration, the wealth of a tiny<br />
	percentage of top-tier earners sky-rocketed, while the<br />
	wages of the vast majority of Americans went flat. A<br />
	rapid escalation in the illusory value of homeownership<br />
	soon followed. But an unseen boom began then, too -- in<br />
	American rates of incarceration, the housing bubble in<br />
	prisons. A recent issue of Daedalus, the journal of the<br />
	American Academy of Arts and Sciences, lays it out. In<br />
	1975, there were fewer than 400,000 people locked up in<br />
	the United States. By 2000, that had grown to 2<br />
	million, and by this year to nearly 2.5 million. As the<br />
	social scientist Glenn C. Loury points out, with 5<br />
	percent of the world&#39;s population, the United States<br />
	imprisons 25 percent of all humans behind bars. This<br />
	effectively created a vibrant shadow economy: American<br />
	spending on the criminal justice system went from $33<br />
	billion in 1980 to $216 billion in 2010 -- an increase<br />
	of 660 percent. Criminal justice is the third largest<br />
	employer in the country.<br />
	<br />
	But while prisons boomed, something else was happening<br />
	-- a trade-off. As sociologist Loic Wacquant says, the<br />
	government was simultaneously slashing funds for public<br />
	housing. In the 1990s, as federal corrections budgets<br />
	increased by $19 billion, money for housing was cut by<br />
	$17 billion, &quot;effectively making the construction of<br />
	prisons the nation&#39;s main housing program for the<br />
	poor.&#39;&#39; State budgets took their cues from Washington<br />
	in a new but unspoken national consensus: poverty<br />
	itself was criminalized. Although &quot;law and order&#39;&#39; was<br />
	taken to be a Republican mantra, this phenomenon was<br />
	fully bipartisan, as Wacquant shows, with the most<br />
	ferocious growth in the incarceration of poor people<br />
	occurring in the Clinton years. &quot;Welfare as we know<br />
	it&#39;&#39; was replaced by punishment. States went<br />
	prison-crazy.<br />
	<br />
	But the current fiscal crisis has blown a hole through<br />
	all that razor-wire. State budgets suddenly cannot<br />
	afford prison systems, which universally choke off<br />
	funds for education, transportation, and<br />
	infrastructure. Some states, like California, consider<br />
	simply releasing prisoners because jail time in<br />
	mega-prisons costs too much. And, equally suddenly, the<br />
	whole system has become morally dubious as well. While<br />
	a famously over-exuberant economy was built on the lies<br />
	of bankers tied to an artificially inflated housing<br />
	sector, the prison boom depended on racist and<br />
	class-biased &quot;criminology&#39;<wbr>&#39; that was, in fact, steadily<br />
	debunked by penal experts. Just as irrational<br />
	assumptions of &quot;risk assessment&#39;&#39; prompted mortgage<br />
	brokers to understate the risks of home ownership, they<br />
	led prosecutors, in a parallel noted by Berkeley law<br />
	professor Jonathan Simon, to grossly overstate the<br />
	risks to society of huge numbers of defendants. The<br />
	housing bubble, Simon shows, devastated neighborhoods<br />
	by littering them with abandoned properties. The prison<br />
	bubble devastated neighborhoods by depriving them of<br />
	fathers and husbands.<br />
	<br />
	The American double-binge has come to an end. In<br />
	Simon&#39;s image, the era of the &quot;big house&#39;&#39; is over,<br />
	whether the McMansion in the suburbs or the mega-prison<br />
	in a field. Here&#39;s the question now: Can the war on the<br />
	poor be returned to the war on poverty? This is not<br />
	simply opening gates and letting criminals go free,<br />
	although the harsh fact must be faced that many<br />
	convicted of non-violent, mainly drug offenses, never<br />
	belonged behind bars in the first place. But<br />
	transferring government over-investment in<br />
	incarceration to re-investment in education and public<br />
	housing is the only real correction to the massive<br />
	&quot;corrections&#39;<wbr>&#39; mistake we made. Re-inflating &quot;America&#39;s<br />
	punishment bubble&#39;&#39; makes no more sense than trying to<br />
	re-inflate the housing bubble.<br />
	<br />
	We must all regret the illusions we embraced, and that<br />
	have been so painfully shattered, but, as Simon argues,<br />
	&quot;We must also recognize the opportunities that the<br />
	present disasters have created for reinvigorating our<br />
	economy and democracy.&#39;&#39;<br />
	<br />
	James Carroll&#39;s column appears regularly in the Globe.<br />
	<br />
	____________<wbr>_________<wbr>_________<wbr>_________<wbr>____<br />
	<br />
	</wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></wbr></p>
]]></content:encoded>
			<dc:subject></dc:subject>
			<dc:date>2010-12-18T00:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
			 

		</item>
		<item>
			<title>criminal justice</title>
			<link>http://www.newlifecathedral.net/n/criminal_justice.html</link>
			<description></description>
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  			<content:encoded><![CDATA[ <p>Please join me in keeping up the momentum for fair and effective criminal sentencing reform in New Jersey.</p>
<p>Earlier this month the New Jersey State Senate and Assembly passed legislation which would allow judges the discretion to waive mandatory minimum sentences for some nonviolent drug offenses.&nbsp; Governor Corzine signed the bill before he left office.&nbsp; This bill was the biggest criminal justice reform in New Jersey in twenty years.&nbsp; Legislators need to know we support them and want them to continue working for further reform.</p>
<p>Thank legislators for voting Yes on mandatory minimum reform! <br />
<br />
<a href="https://secure2.convio.net/dpa/site/Advocacy?cmd=display&amp;page=UserAction&amp;id=524">https://secure2.convio.net/dpa/site/Advocacy?cmd=display&amp;page=UserAction&amp;id=524</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<dc:subject></dc:subject>
			<dc:date>2010-02-06T00:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
			 

		</item>
		<item>
			<title>THE NEW START</title>
			<link>http://www.newlifecathedral.net/n/the_new_start.html</link>
			<description></description>
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  			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div>WHEN GOD SENDS YOU TO OTHER SIDE</div> I just expericend the awsome feeling of getting to the other side.&nbsp; To be completely honest the ride is never plesent my butt hurts from the bumps, my face itches from all the wind and my arms feel like I just wrestled with hulk hogan!&nbsp; I'm sure that you have experienced such things the welcome sight of sand can bring tears to your eyes, but it's the storms that hurt.&nbsp; Maybe you are going thourgh some things and you are wondering if God really told you to go to the other side!&nbsp; Well i'm here with some <b>good news!&nbsp; T</b>hat there is another side even when the winds and rains say there isn'. t if you keep trusting Him you will make it.&nbsp; <b>He never promised that they would get there in the boat they were in, only that they would make it!</b>&nbsp; It doesn't matter what it looks like keep rowing!<br />
<br />
<b>Pastor E</b>]]></content:encoded>
			<dc:subject></dc:subject>
			<dc:date>2008-01-13T00:00:00-05:00</dc:date>
			 

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