1,600 years before Plymouth, a Thanksgiving feast took place in Israel just before the most important week in human history — and it was all about gratitude



Many centuries before the autumn 1621 meal in Plymouth between the colonists and the Wampanoag, another kind of Thanksgiving feast took place in Israel — and it quietly set the stage for the most important week in human history.

The details come from the Bible — specifically the Gospel of John, chapter 12.

It's a little slice of life wedged between perhaps Jesus' greatest miracle — raising his friend Lazarus from the dead — and his triumphal entry into Jerusalem, which marks the beginning of Passover week — the last week of Jesus' life.

But on the day before he enters Jerusalem upon a donkey, treading over palm branches amid cries of "Hosanna," Jesus returns to nearby Bethany to once again be with Lazarus and his sisters, Mary and Martha, along with his disciples and perhaps others.

On this day, the thankful siblings give Jesus a "dinner."

My pastor discussed this passage on Sunday and mentioned that the Greek word used for "dinner" or "supper" in John 12:2 is the same word used in Revelation 19:9 to describe the "marriage supper of the Lamb." Amazing that this hidden-away gathering — those in power were already plotting to kill Jesus, and he had to be cautious about where he walked — carries and reveals so much spiritual meaning.

Turns out this feast in honor of the Lamb about to be sacrificed for us is centered squarely on gratitude.

We learn that as Martha serves the meal and Lazarus reclines at the table with Jesus, Mary takes expensive ointment, anoints Jesus' feet with it, then wipes his feet with her hair. With that, the whole house is filled with a lavish fragrance — indeed, this is special stuff that appears to be worth the equivalent of a year's wages.

But my pastor pointed out that the monetary value of the ointment doesn't matter to Mary in this moment: She only wants to be present with Jesus and express her love not only for what he's done but also for who he's become in her life.

Judas, on the other hand, criticizes Mary's extravagant gesture as a waste of finances — after which Jesus tells him, “Leave her alone, so that she may keep it for the day of my burial. For the poor you always have with you, but you do not always have me.”

There's much to be drawn from this snapshot of a gathering in a Middle Eastern town long before turkeys, stuffing, cranberry sauce, and sleeping it all off, only to rise early on Black Friday to take advantage of outrageous discounts on Christmas presents.

Here we see gratitude lived out. A willingness to give up that which is most valuable in a bottom-line sense in order to bestow it upon the One who is most valuable in the eternal sense. My pastor wisely noted that when we give — whether it's our time, our money, our physical efforts, our emotional selves — we give a little bit more of our selfishness away.

What's more, he added that if we practice the discipline not only of giving but of gratitude — daily gratitude, in fact — we can literally change our attitudes for the better over time. Therefore, no matter what has happened to us, no matter how bad we've had it or think we've had it, we can reshape our attitudes and hearts by purposely focusing on things we're grateful for on a daily basis.

On this Thanksgiving, I'm grateful for truths like this that feed my soul and enlighten the path ahead. I'm particularly grateful for Mary's example of extravagant love that pushes cost aside in favor of simply sitting at Jesus' feet.

Really, is there any better place to be?

Keith Olbermann attacks homeschooling mom on Mother's Day: 'Imagine putting 'homeschool mom' in your bio and not understanding you've just ruined the lives of five innocent children'



In a tweet on Mother's Day, Keith Olbermann took a dig at a woman who homeschools her children.

"Imagine putting 'homeschool mom' in your bio and not understanding you've just ruined the lives of five innocent children," Olbermann wrote in response to a tweet from Bethany S. Mandel, who is married to Washington Examiner magazine executive editor Seth Mandel.

Imagine putting "homeschool mom" in your bio and not understanding you've just ruined the lives of five innocent children
— Keith Olbermann (@Keith Olbermann) 1652043686

"What an empty life this man lives," Bethany Mandel tweeted in response to Olbermann's saucy remark.

In another tweet, she jokingly wrote, "My poor homeschooled kids," when retweeting a post that included photos of children at the National Gallery of Art.

What an empty life this man lives. This is how we live ours. https://twitter.com/keitholbermann/status/1523407754504798209\u00a0\u2026pic.twitter.com/e3nfAz4qDA
— Bethany S. Mandel (@Bethany S. Mandel) 1652045616

"If my kids went to public school where I live, they would be at a severe academic disadvantage. They would have spent over year on Zoom and then tried to learn how to read with their and their teacher’s mouths covered as they learned letter sounds," Mandel told Fox News. "Instead, they go to museums and have 1:1 instruction with the most caring and loving teacher possible: their mom. My kids are extraordinarily lucky to be homeschooled."

Blaze Media's Jessica O'Donnell replied to Olbermann's impertinent post by tweeting, "imagine being known for creating psychotically angry videos on the internet."

"Keith, I agree with you on politics, but this was a low blow attack; there is nothing wrong with homeschooling. We can do better," David Weissman tweeted in response to Olbermann's comment.

"I try to operate under the assumption that even the people I strenuously disagree with are usually operating in something like good faith but Olbermann is a good reminder that some people just suck," Drew Holden tweeted.

"Ugh. I don’t know where this comes from. But anecdotally homeschool people I know are far ahead of their public school peers and go on to high powered grad programs and lucrative careers," Emily Ekins tweeted.

Last year, Olbermann, who apparently has no kids and has never been married, responded to photo of Sen. Mitt Romney's family by tweeting, "Somebody gift these people some vasectomies."

Somebody gift these people some vasectomiespic.twitter.com/hp5RAUF3pk
— Keith Olbermann (@Keith Olbermann) 1640785378

Facebook bans ads from conservative children's book publisher in 'error,' reverses decision after Fox Business report



Meta, the parent company for Facebook, has reinstated the advertisement account of the conservative children's book publisher Heroes of Liberty after the company's communications director said the account was permanently suspended in "error."

Heroes of Liberty publishes illustrated children's books about historical figures who have "promoted freedom, faith, or family values, or lived a virtuous life of self-reliance, creativity, or devotion in light of those sacred principles." Their series features biographies on John Wayne, President Ronald Regan, Thomas Sowell, Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney Barrett, and other prominent historical figures.

On Monday, Heroes of Liberty editor and board member Bethany Mandel said that Facebook "dealt a real blow" to the publisher by banning their ads just days before Christmas. Facebook on Dec. 23 had said their ads had violated the company's rules against "Low Quality or Disruptive Content" but did not provide specific details on how they did so.

Thread: My new children's book publishing company, @HeroesOfLiberty, was dealt a real blow going into the New Year, when we were banned by Facebook. We\u2019re a new literary start-up that publishes quality illustrated biographies of great Americans.https://www.foxbusiness.com/politics/facebook-permanently-locks-conservative-childrens-book-publisher-heroes-liberty\u00a0\u2026
— Bethany S. Mandel (@Bethany S. Mandel) 1641220644

After Heroes of Liberty appealed Facebook's decision, the company's content moderators rejected their appeal, writing in a message: "After a final review of this ad account, we confirmed it didn't comply with our Advertising Policies or other standards."

In a Twitter thread, Mandel explained that there were a number of negative comments from Facebook users on the Heroes of Liberty ads and suggested that these users may have reported the ads to Facebook.

After Fox Business published a report on Facebook's action against Heroes of Liberty, a spokesman for the company said the account had been suspended in error.

"I wanted to let you know that the ads account was disabled in error and has been restored," Meta spokesman Drew Pusateri told Fox Business on Monday.

But while Facebook responded to media inquiries, Mandel said Heroes of Liberty was never told their account was restored.

"They proactively reached out to several members of Congress and told them it was a mistake and we’re back online. Those offices told us," Mandel told Fox Business. "They didn't reach out to us."

Speaking to Fox News on Tuesday, Mandel said that Meta's unresponsiveness had left Heroes of Liberty in the dark.

"When they initially disabled us two-days before Christmas when we were sort of doing our big push to sell our books they never told us anything," Mandel said.

"We were kind of left hanging not knowing what to do and not knowing who to contact," she explained.

Mandel said that Heroes of Liberty was contacted by multiple U.S. congressman after the Fox Business report, which got the ball rolling on action from Meta.

"Fast-forward to late last night, they're telling Brit Hume on Twitter and Mary Katherine Ham on Twitter that we were reinstated. And they told multiple members of Congress that we were reinstated, but they never actually contacted us directly. We see our ad account is back enabled but we have no idea if we're on probation or if it was in fact an error," Mandel said.

She suggested that "woke people behind the screen at Facebook" listen to a vocal minority of left-wing Facebook users that report conservative content because they deem it offensive.

Video: NY health commissioner admits using overblown claims about child COVID hospitalizations to scare parents into vaccinating their kids



New York's acting health commissioner, Dr. Mary Bassett, openly admitted this week to misleading people about an "upward trend" in child COVID-19 hospitalizations in order to "motivate" parents to get their children vaccinated.

What are the details?

Last Friday, the state health department issued a health alert notifying pediatricians of a concerning trend — hospitalizations among children with COVID-19 were up across the state and had quadrupled in the New York City area. No official numbers were given.

The news quickly garnered attention in the state, worrying parents about their children's safety amid the surge of the new Omicron variant. Only it turns out the number of children hospitalized with the virus at the time was relatively low and the numbers were deceptively framed in order to encourage vaccinations.

In a press conference Monday alongside Democratic Gov. Kathy Hochul, Bassett — who came down with the virus last week despite being fully vaccinated against it — effectively acknowledged that the state health department's misleadingly framed the numbers to scare parents.

“The numbers that we gave on pediatric admissions weren’t intended to make it seem that children were having an epidemic of infection, these were small numbers," Bassett admitted regarding the alert. "That was based on 50 hospitalizations, and I've now given you some larger numbers, but they're still small numbers."

“It really was to motivate pediatricians and families to seek the protection of vaccination," she then stated.

Sorry to bust up the manipulation ploy.pic.twitter.com/y9msS5K3sq
— Bethany S. Mandel (@Bethany S. Mandel) 1640751324

"Many people continue to think that children do not become infected with COVID. This is not true," Bassett continued. "Children become infected with COVID and some will become hospitalized. The vaccination coverage remains too low."

"We need to get child vaccinations up, particularly in the 5-to-11-year-old age group," she argued.

What else?

Using blatant scare tactics to encourage people towards a specific action is bad enough, but it's made worse by the possibility that the supposedly concerning numbers were artificially inflated.

In a report about the uptick published Tuesday, NBC News noted that the larger numbers of hospitalizations likely include asymptomatic children brought to the hospital for reasons other than infection with the virus.

Dr. Paul Offit, a vaccine expert at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, told NBC his hospital had seen many kids test positive for the virus recently who hadn't shown symptoms or come in with a sickness.

"We test anybody who’s admitted to the hospital for whatever reason to see whether or not they have COVID, and we’re definitely seeing an increase in cases. However, we’re really not seeing an increase in children who are hospitalized for COVID or in the intensive care unit for COVID," Offit said.

Offit's explanation is backed up by Department of Health and Human Services policy. NBC News noted that hospital patients are counted as COVID-19 hospitalizations even if they were not originally admitted to the hospital for that reason so long as they are suspected of having the disease or display a laboratory-confirmed positive for the disease.

Biggest lie of the night? Joe Biden says no one lost their health insurance under Obamacare



Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden told a brazen lie about Obamacare Thursday evening during the final presidential debate in Nashville, Tennessee, claiming that no one lost their private health insurance plans under the Affordable Care Act.

President Donald Trump attacked Biden's health care plan, accusing the Democratic nominee's plan of being "socialized medicine" that would terminate "180 million" private insurance plans.

In response, Biden said that if the Supreme Court declares Obamacare unconstitutional he will pass new health care legislation "with a public option." He declared his support for private health insurance, arguing that a public option would increase competition by giving private health insurance plans something to compete against.

Then he told a whopper.

"The reason why I had such a fight with 20 candidates for the nomination was I support private insurance," Biden said. "Not one single person with private insurance would lose their insurance under my plan, nor did they under Obamacare. They did not lose their insurance unless they chose they wanted to go to something else."

Biden's claim is demonstrably false. After the Affordable Care Act took effect in 2013, more than 5 million Americans received cancellation letters from their insurance companies, informing them that the health insurance plans they had did not meet the standards of Obamacare.

President Obama's promise that "if you like your health care pan, you can keep your health care plan" was rated as PolitiFact's Lie of the Year in 2013.

"So this fall, as cancellation letters were going out to approximately 4 million Americans, the public realized Obama's breezy assurances were wrong," Politifact wrote.

In fact, NBC News reported in 2013 that the Obama administration knew that millions of Americans would lose their health insurance under Obamacare. While the Affordable Care Act had a provision that allowed for some health insurance polices to be "grandfathered" in, meaning consumers could keep their plans even if they didn't meet the essential benefits mandates required by Obamacare, the provision was written so narrowly that many of the plans didn't qualify.

At the debate, Biden promised that his plan to expand Obamacare with a public option would also reduce insurance premiums. But the Obama administration made similar claims about Obamacare, and the truth was that Obamacare significantly increased health insurance premiums by as much as 24.4% beyond what they would have been if costs rose naturally, according to one study.

Many individuals who remember having their insurance plans cancelled spoke out on social media.

Joe Biden is lying. My family is one of millions that lost our health insurance because of Obamacare.
— Dana Loesch (@Dana Loesch)1603417848.0
I LOST MY INSURANCE UNDER OBAMACARE!SO DID DRUDGE, SO DID EVERY FREELANCER, SO DID EVERY SOLE PRACTITIONER.F--K YOU, JOE BIDEN.
— Ann Coulter (@Ann Coulter)1603417887.0
Here's my personal Obamacare anecdote: before it, I had great private insurance that cost $110/month. The ACA cance… https://t.co/de9pg0ELxt
— Noah Pollak (@Noah Pollak)1603418026.0
I lost my insurance under Obamacare, Joe! 🙋‍♀️ #PresidentialDebate2020
— Inez Stepman ⚪️🔴⚪️ (@Inez Stepman ⚪️🔴⚪️)1603417886.0
Ummm i lost my insurance under Obamacare. The plans got abolished. Trump needs to hammer that point.
— Daniel Horowitz (@Daniel Horowitz)1603417852.0
My entire Twitter feed right now is people saying they lost their health insurance under Obamacare.
— Bethany S. Mandel (@Bethany S. Mandel)1603418101.0

Watch:

Biden claims no one lost their private insurance plan under Obamacarewww.youtube.com

(H/T: Washington Free Beacon)