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As I was ministering to someone, what I call a blocking demon took control of them. Blocking demons have very unique types of functions. They do strange things. But these strange things are diversionary mechanisms so that the exorcism cannot proceed. This demon somehow lowered the body temperature of this person - I mean their lips turned blue. They were dying.
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Exclusive: My Letter to Senator Mike DeWine
Posted on Friday, November 10 @ 20:19:34 PST by Virgil Vaduva

PlanetPreterist Columns by Virgil Vaduva
Dear Senator, as the 2006 elections are behind us, I want to write a candid and open letter to you on behalf of myself and my family. I did vote for you, however reluctantly, on November 7th, but I want to follow my vote with a short letter to outline my concerns to you and to the Republican Party in general.

Several years ago I was the guest speaker at the Xenia Chamber of Commerce, and I was very happy to share my message of Reagan-esque economic outlook, commerce and social policies. I told the Xenia businessmen how I was born in Communist Romania and how I lived a large portion of my life under Communism. I spoke about growing up in a country in which the central government got to decide what people ate for dinner, what car they could drive and when we could enjoy electricity in our homes, and I told them about my dreams as a child of some day living free in the United States of America.

That day came in 1992 when I was able to move to this country and finally have my life-long dream fulfilled. Of all places in America I landed in Cedarville, Ohio, less than a mile away from your own home. I did have the privilege of meeting you when you were serving as a Lieutenant Governor; I have attended ice-cream socials at your house and I still remember the dark infamous day in which your daughter Becky died in that car accident on U.S. 42, and the vigil we attended as Cedarville students in her memory. The straightened-out road curve a few miles outside Cedarville is serving as a standing memorial of things you've done to protect other drivers from having the same fate as Becky.

When I finished college I started a small business in Cedarville with a college friend, which has been successful considering my humble roots. Your son Kevin has even been our customer for a while, and the freedom enjoyed here allowed me to learn even more about the United States and market economics.

All my experiences have served to learn to appreciate you almost as a neighbor or even a distant family member. And this is what has prompted me to write to you. The loss you experienced on November 7th was not as much a loss for conservative principles and ideology, but a loss for Republicanism. Two years ago I was very excited to vote for the very first time as a U.S. citizen. A Republican victory became a reality and I was very much looking forward to seeing the Republican Party display fiscal responsibility, reduction in taxes, responsible immigration policies, elimination of eminent domain, and other crucial conservative items. Instead, the disappointment became tangible when you followed the lead of Senator John McCain and became a member of the "Gang of 14" which in essence undermined the U.S. Constitution and the right of the President to appoint his judicial nominees and have them confirmed by a simple Senate majority.

If I may respectfully suggest, this was the reason for your loss. I do not believe you lost your Senate seat because the Democrats ran a better campaign, rather I believe you failed to enforce the mandate given to you by the American people. It was a conservative mandate, which demanded conservative values, policies and conservative principles. That mandate was instead largely handed over to the losing party in the form of entitlement bills written by Democrat Senators, and strong-arming moves designed to block crucial judicial nominees to the federal bench. Together with Senator Voinovich you have failed us. Instead of standing for Conservatism, you as our Senator stood up for Republicanism and political convenience.

In 1987 I remember hearing President Ronald Reagan’s plea in Berlin made to Gorbachev to Tear down this Wall at the Brandenburg gate. I was able to hear that speech on an underground radio station financed by President Reagan’s foreign policies, called The Voice of America. On my desk I have a piece of the Berlin wall taken from the Brandenburg gate. I picked it out myself, and I use it as a memorial to make sure that I never forget what happens when a government insists on controlling freedom and controlling every aspect of people’s lives.

Senator DeWine, I did not come to the United States to watch a renewed rise of Socialism, and I cannot in good conscience continue to support a Republican Party that is refusing to believe it wins elections or that it has a mandate to govern. I do however continue to hope for a future where a renewed Reagan-esque vigor can flow through the veins of Conservative Americans (not Republicans), to not just win elections but also actively work to create less government, lower taxes, eliminate government regulations and intrusions in citizens’ lives and eliminate government-run retirement. The truth is that the Republican Congress is guilty of all those things, and has failed to curb or stop the liberal policies pushed forward by the Democrats; and most of the fault lies in the Senate, starting with those Republicans involved in the “Gang of 14.”

I am hoping that my letter will find an open ear and will be considered by you and your staff, and I am hoping that if you will ever be again a member of the U.S. Congress, you will reconsider the implications of your positions and the expectations coming from those whom you would be representing.

Respectfully,

Virgil Vaduva

------

Virgil Vaduva is a columnist for PlanetPreterist.com.

View Virgil Vaduva archives

Note: Opinions presented on PlanetPreterist.com or by PlanetPreterist.com columnists may not necessarily reflect the position of PlanetPreterist.com, or reflect the beliefs, doctrine or theological position of all other preterists. We encourage all readers to first and foremost carefully analyze all articles in the light of God's Word.


 
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Re: My Letter to Senator Mike DeWine (Score: 1)
by Terry on Saturday, November 11 @ 05:47:17 PST
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Excellent. This letter has been forwarded to Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity.

Terry M. Hall
Dayton, Ohio


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Re: My Letter to Senator Mike DeWine (Score: 1)
by Islamaphobe on Saturday, November 11 @ 07:19:48 PST
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It's a very good letter, and I hope it does get the attention of Rush and Sean. Unfortunately, the pressure will be on the Republicans to become more "moderate" so as to win back the swing voters who swung over to the dark side this time. I don't see any Reagans out there in the sense of prominent politicians who combine national prominence, a thorough understanding of what has made America work, and the ability to articulate what needs to be said.

Given that the mainstream media and our educational institutions seem more committed than ever to destroying the Christian foundation of this nation, it is vital that conservatives who combine knowledge and communications skills do their best to offset the forces arrayed against us. The challenge is huge.

As for Senator DeWine, when he joined the gang of 14, I sent Elizabeth Dole's NRSC a note stating that I would no longer contribute funds to her group, and I stuck with that position through the half-dozen solicitations I received from the NRSC during the next few months. I hope I am now off their mailing list. I voted for Corker in the general election after voting for Ed Bryant in the primary. Reluctantly, I have to say that the Republicans did not deserve to win this time around. I hope that some of the good people they still have can bring them back around, but if they get back, I hope they do so with some slogan other than "compassionate conservatism"; i.e. a government of big federal spending on social programs. Genuine Christian-based conservatism is compassionate by its nature.

We can now look forward to a parade of nonsense from the new Congress in the form of bipartisan legislation, such as the forthcoming "Bill to Create Unemployment"; i.e. the minimum wage increase. Of course it won't be called that, and it will be embraced by all our "drive-by media" experts, but it will be a job killer and a work-experience killer. The good news is that because the federal minimum wage hasn't been raised for a while, the damage done this time will be quite limited, at first. The bad news is that because the understanding of basic economics is so primitive in both the general public and the media, the temptation to keep raising the minimum wage will be irresistible.

On that pleasant note I sign off.

John S. Evans


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Re: My Letter to Senator Mike DeWine (Score: 1)
by Mick on Saturday, November 11 @ 11:04:19 PST
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Virgil,
Your letter is excellent. I concur with your original letter and the subsequent comments. I found the election in Ohio interesting on many levels. I perceived the election was set to bring voters out who desire more government involvement in their lives and less personal responsibility for their lives. Therefore, the election yielded a “left-leaning” outcome. I don’t like to use the term liberal, as I do not understand how more government means more freedom. Two issues on the ballot yielded the expected results.
The “smoke-less” amendment and the “smoke-free” law was all about move government and less personal responsibility. As a physician, I am acutely aware of the hazards of first hand smoke and the perceived risks associated with second hand smoke, but do the risks truly go down for people who live with smokers when these smokers stop smoking in public? Do my risks for second hand smoke really go up if I choose to not visit places that allow smoke to spread to the non-smoking sections? What is next to be outlawed in Ohio? Body odor? Flatulence? I suggest many more deaths and injuries occur from the “second hand” effects of alcohol than tobacco, i.e. traffic accidents, beatings and other violent crimes. What brought about a reduction in these “second-hand” effects of alcohol? Not constitutional amendments which are later repealed, but grass roots education of consequences and individual responsibility.
The minimum wage law also was designed to also bring out the government loving crowd. I am not an economist and maybe those who understand economic theory better than I do can comment more. I perceive raising minimum wages arbitrarily, leads to inflation. Then those with the least amount of disposable income have to pay higher prices for goods and services, unless government puts caps on them, and the low wage earner is back to square one. I perceive the solution for the low wage earner who cannot make ends meet is to live with less or employment advancement. For the individual who cannot accomplish either option, then the church is to help, not the government. I perceive for every dollar I give to somebody in need that is a dollar that person has to use of invest. If I go through the government, that individual gets something less than a dollar. I admit my biased view since I do live at the top of the food chain though. Former Senator Rick Santorum has many interesting ideas in his book, “It Takes a Family.”
Knowing that we had these types of ballot issues, I would not expect a different outcome.

Mick


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Re: My Letter to Senator Mike DeWine (Score: 1)
by Sam on Saturday, November 11 @ 12:52:47 PST
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Virgil,

Maybe the "conservative" Republicans are on a "journey" looking for "truth" in government principles. Maybe higher wages in Ohio and smoke free restaurants (like we have here in Florida) are just "pitstops" along the way to a newer, kinder Republicanism...maybe they are just trying to erase the "creed" of conservative laisse faire economics, individual responsibility and the like. Maybe Communism had some answers that need to be "explored" again...I mean, after all, we must be open to these things and "explore" all possibilities.

Sam


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Voice of (in??)sanity from the Antipodes (Score: 1)
by EWMI on Saturday, November 11 @ 13:25:53 PST
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(I am getting tired of typing this!)

The Liberal/Conservative, Left/Right, Democrat/Republican divide is meaningless. It is nothing more than the Hegelian Dialectic in operation and is intended as a distraction for the masses.

The march to economic collapse, global war and the end of national sovereignty continues unabated in almost every nation on earth. We comment on America most because the planet can survive the collapse of every other country, where America goes the world follows.

The final and ultimate questions we must ask ourselves are:
1) Can my family and loved ones survive what is coming?
2) Can the church survive underground?

God Help Us All


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My Observation (Score: 1)
by valensname on Saturday, November 11 @ 20:55:26 PST
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In following the posts on this article and the one on New Heavens and Earth, it appears to me that there are those on this site who seem to advocate a "grey" theology. They don't seem to come out and say they believe this or stand for this but instead seem to talk in generalities. However, then when they are accused of believing something deemed "negative" they say they never said such a thing. And they didn't but their general way of advocating their ideas strongly suggests such to the reader.

It seems to me that there are those who don't seem to believe in standing up and calling what God has called evil as evil. They seem to have lost that we are supposed to hate that which is evil or are we? By that I mean there is all this grey area when it comes to speaking out, or making laws, or enforcing laws regarding issues such as abortion (what I call murder), homosexuality (a sin as defined by God), etc... It seems some are advocating that "loving" everyone and "allowing" them to do something is the right way to go. They seem to have lost the belief that the reason evil is evil, or bad is bad, or this is immoral is because God says it is. There seems to be this prevalent concept that that is your "interpretation" on something. That there is no way to be certain that something is wrong or evil. Thus what are we as Christians supposed to do? Love our neighbor and "let" evil become everywhere in the land?

My point I'm trying to make is - Some on this website seem to be joining the humanistic secular evolutionary mindset of the day that morality is not based on God's Word or is built into us that somethings are just plain wrong and is an absolute truth but is whatever man deems fit at the time. There seems to be a lack of standing up for a moral code based upon not men's whims and wishes but on God. For if we are all came from slim over billions of years, then there is no such thing as morally right or wrong.

Glenn


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