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September 22, 2021

Use the Debt Ceiling to Reduce the Debt

Congress will soon vote on whether to raise the national debt limit, which it has modified nearly 100 times. Having faced more than a dozen of these votes during my eight terms in Congress, I am confident the debt limit will be raised again but probably only after an unproductive spate of hyperbole and brinkmanship. The question is whether this Congress, like others, will take the opportunity to enact measures that address our national debt. I doubt it will, but there is no doubt that America is far better off with a debt limit than without one.

Today the U.S. has the largest national gross debt in its history as a percentage of gross domestic product—even larger than the debt incurred during World War II. Unlike that debt, which was an episodic price for survival, today’s is structural and growing rapidly. The Medicare and Social Security Trustees recently issued a report showing that the two largest government programs continue to careen toward insolvency.

Read more in the Wall Street Journal.

Mike Pence named No. 1 on 2021 list of Israel’s ‘Top Christian Allies’

Former US vice president Mike Pence took the first slot in the Israel Allies Foundation (IAF) annual list of Top Christian Allies. The list was released on Monday in honor of Sukkot.
“Recognizing the heroic work of our Christian supporters is an important display of our gratitude toward them,” said IAF President Josh Reinstein. “It is only due to Christian political support for Israel, which we refer to as faith-based diplomacy, that Israel enjoys such steady support from its allies around the world. It is Christians, not countries that we can count on to always stand with Israel.”
The rest of the top five slots were taken by Pastor John Hagee, founder of Christians United for Israel; Pastor Larry Huch, founding pastor of New Beginnings Church in Dallas; Stephen Harper, the former prime minister of Canada; and Christian philanthropist Dick Saulsbury.

Pence was selected, the IAF said in a release, because of his role in the move of the US embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem and for his defense of the right of Israel to Jerusalem, the Golan Heights, Judea and Samaria. Pence was a member of the Israel Allies Caucus during his tenure as a US congressman.
The names were released on the eve of Sukkot because many Christians are especially connected to the Feast of Tabernacles, their name for the Jewish holiday. This connection comes from a verse in the Book of the Prophet Zecharia that describes a time when people from all the nations of the world come to the Holy City and celebrate and pray together at the foot of the Temple Mount.
“And it shall come to pass that everyone who is left of all the nations which came against Jerusalem shall go up from year to year to worship the King, the Lord of hosts, and to keep the Feast of Tabernacles,” it says in Zecharia 14:16.
Zecharia is read in synagogues on Sukkot.
In a typical year, when the world is not plagued by COVID-19, thousands of Christians from all over the world travel to Israel for the holiday and to participate in the March of Nations in support of the Jewish state. The event culminates in a colorful ceremony at Sacher Park in Jerusalem.
The IAF list highlights supporters from around the world, spanning many continents and Christian denominations. For example, Dr. Young Hoon Lee, a senior pastor in South Korea at the largest megachurch in the world, made the list at spot No. 27. In addition, Pastor Sandor Nemeth, founder and senior pastor of Faith Church in Hungary, is No. 13.
“For me, standing with the modern State of Israel and supporting the Jewish people, in general, comes naturally and should be reflected in the life of every Bible-reading, God-fearing Christian believer worldwide,” the pastor said.
The full list can be viewed online at israelallies.org/israels-top-50-christian-allies-2021.

Read the original on The Jerusalem Post.

Time to end government’s monopoly on education

When every parent has a choice, every student has a chance.

The fact that a new school year is beginning after a year of pandemic shutdowns is undoubtedly a cause for celebration. But at the same time, the last thing America needs is a return to “normal” in our public school classrooms.

The COVID-19 pandemic was a stress test on public education that revealed fundamental flaws in the system that are deep, lasting, and likely to get worse.

Over the past year, Americans have seen teachers’ unions and education bureaucrats leverage the pandemic to score political victories and extort more money from taxpayers while lobbying to keep schools closed counter to CDC guidance.  These efforts needlessly exacerbated and prolonged hardship for millions of students and families.