Connect to your account and we’ll send your message to Twitter.
Twitter Account: Not authorized (update)
Celebrating ‘The Twilight Saga: New Moon’
In honor of the opening day of New Moon, the latest film in The Twilight Saga, we thought we ...
The Cheryl Behind the Cheryl
Known to many as the long-suffering (ex)wife of funnyman Larry David, the man behind Seinfeld, ...
BlogTalkRadio Host of the Week: Alfred McComber from...
By Christina Blodgett In our continuing effort to spotlight more members of the BlogTalkRadio ...
http://www.politicsforher.com
Country: United States
Language: English
Add to Friends
Send Message
Syrin
12/8/2008 6:15 AM UTC
Happy Holiday Ladies- I appreciate your show
Donna Brown
11/5/2008 1:05 AM UTC
I keep getting a message that there are no shows scheduled for the next 24 hours.
Cheri Speaks
11/1/2008 1:46 AM UTC
Sorry I had to cut out before the show was over tonight, but I will come back to listen to another show. Great discussion!
Sister On A Mission
10/31/2008 1:00 AM UTC
http://www.religioustolerance.org/chr_jcpa5.htm "The Christian myths were first related of Horus or Osiris, who was the embodiment of divine goodness, wisdom, truth and purity...This was the greatest hero that ever lived in the mind of man -- not in the flesh -- the only hero to whom the miracles were natural because he was not human." 1 bullet "...I am the LORD thy God from the land of Egypt, and thou shalt know no god but me: for there is no saviour beside me." Hosea 13:4, King James Version. This passage may have an additional and completely different meaning from that usually assigned. About Yeshua of Nazareth: He is commonly referred to as Jesus Christ, although Joshua would be a more accurate translation of his first name. "Christ" is not his last name; it is simply the Greek word for "Messiah," or "anointed one." Theologians have discovered about 50 gospels which were widely used by Jewish, Pauline and Gnostic groups within the early Christian movement. Only four of these were chosen by the surviving group, Pauline Christianity, and were included in the Bible. Those four Gospels describe Jesus as a Jew who was born to a virgin in Palestine circa 4 to 7 BCE. He is portrayed as a rabbi, teacher, healer, exorcist, magician, 18 prophet, and religious leader who had a one year (according to Mark, Matthew and Luke) or a three year (according to John) ministry in Palestine, starting when he was about 30 years old. Most Christians believe that he was executed by the Roman occupying army, visited the underworld, was resurrected, spent 40 days with his disciples, and then ascended to heaven. Most Christian denominations view Jesus as God, and as the Son of God, the second person in the Trinity.| Conservative Christians view the Gospels as being inerrant whose authors were inspired by God. The Gospels and other passages in the Bible are mostly interpreted literally. Muslims revere Jesus as a great prophet -- next only to Muhammad in importance. They regard the assertion that Jesus is God to be blasphemy. About Horus: Various ancient Egyptian statues and writings tell of Horus, (pronounced "hohr'-uhs;" a.k.a. Harseisis, Heru-sa-Aset (Horus, son of Isis), Heru-ur (Horus the elder), Hr, and Hrw), a creator sky God. He was worshipped thousands of years before the first century CE -- the time when Jesus was ministering in Palestine. 2 Horus was often represented as a stylized eye symbol, symbolizing the eye of a falcon. He was also presented "in the shape of a sparrow hawk or as a man [or lion] with a hawk's head." 3 He is often shown as an infant cradled by his mother Isis. He was considered to be the son of two major Egyptian deities: the God Osirus and and the Goddess Isis. In adulthood, he avenged his father's murder, and became recognized as the God of civil order and justice. Each of the Egyptian pharaohs were believed to be the living embodiment -- an incarnation -- of Horus. 4 Isis with Horus 5 Horus 5 "A list of the names of all the gods of Egypt would fill pages. But all these gods were only forms, attributes or phases of Ra, the solar god, who himself was the supreme symbol or metaphor for God....Horus, the son of Osirus and Isis, is himself an aspect of Ra." 6 horizontal rule Life events shared by Horus and Jesus Stories from the life of Horus had been circulating for centuries before Jesus birth (circa 4 to 7 BCE). If any copying occurred by the writers of the Egyptian or Christian religions, it was the followers of Jesus who incorporated into his biography the myths and legends of Horus, not vice-versa. Author and theologian Tom Harpur studied the works of three authors who have written about ancient Egyptian religion: Godfrey Higgins (1771-1834), Gerald Massey (1828-1907) and Alvin Boyd Kuhn (1880-1963). Harpur incorporated some of their findings into his book "Pagan Christ." He argued that all of the essential ideas of both Judaism and Christianity came primarily from Egyptian religion. "[Author Gerald] Massey discovered nearly two hundred instances of immediate correspondence between the mythical Egyptian material and the allegedly historical Christian writings about Jesus. Horus indeed was the archetypal Pagan Christ." 7 horizontal rule Sponsored link: horizontal rule Comparison of some life events of Horus and Jesus: Event Horus Yeshua of Nazareth, a.k.a. Jesus Conception: By a virgin. There is some doubt about this matter By a virgin. 8 Father: Only begotten son of the God Osiris. Only begotten son of Yehovah (in the form of the Holy Spirit). Mother: Meri. 9 Miriam (a.k.a. Mary). Foster father: Seb, (Jo-Seph). 9 Joseph. Foster father's ancestry: Of royal descent. Of royal descent. Birth location: In a cave. In a cave or stable. Annunciation: By an angel to Isis, his mother. By an angel to Miriam, his mother. 8 Birth heralded by: The star Sirius, the morning star. An unidentified "star in the East." Birth date: Ancient Egyptians paraded a manger and child representing Horus through the streets at the time of the winter solstice (typically DEC-21). Celebrated on DEC-25. The date was chosen to occur on the same date as the birth of Mithra, Dionysus and the Sol Invictus (unconquerable Sun), etc. Birth announcement: By angels. By angels. 8 Birth witnesses: Shepherds. Shepherds. 8 Later witnesses to birth: Three solar deities. Three wise men. 8 Death threat during infancy: Herut tried to have Horus murdered. Herod tried to have Jesus murdered. Handling the threat: The God That tells Horus' mother "Come, thou goddess Isis, hide thyself with thy child." An angel tells Jesus' father to: "Arise and take the young child and his mother and flee into Egypt." Rite of passage ritual: Horus came of age with a special ritual, when his eye was restored. Taken by parents to the temple for what is today called a bar mitzvah ritual. Age at the ritual: 12 12 Break in life history: No data between ages of 12 & 30. No data between ages of 12 & 30. Baptism location: In the river Eridanus. In the river Jordan. Age at baptism: 30. 30. Baptized by: Anup the Baptiser. John the Baptist. Subsequent fate of the baptiser: Beheaded. Beheaded. Temptation: Taken from the desert of Amenta up a high mountain by his arch-rival Sut. Sut (a.k.a. Set) was a precursor for the Hebrew Satan. Taken from the desert in Palestine up a high mountain by his arch-rival Satan. Result of temptation: Horus resists temptation. Jesus resists temptation. Close followers: Twelve disciples. There is some doubt about this matter as well. Twelve disciples. Activities: Walked on water, cast out demons, healed the sick, restored sight to the blind. He "stilled the sea by his power." Walked on water, cast out demons, healed the sick, restored sight to the blind. He ordered the sea with a "Peace, be still" command. Raising of the dead: Horus raised Osirus, his dead father, from the grave. 10 Jesus raised Lazarus from the grave. Location where the resurrection miracle occurred: Anu, an Egyptian city where the rites of the death, burial and resurrection of Horus were enacted annually. 10 Hebrews added their prefix for house ('beth") to "Anu" to produce "Beth-Anu" or the "House of Anu." Since "u" and "y" were interchangeable in antiquity, "Bethanu" became "Bethany," the location mentioned in John 11. Origin of Lazarus' name in the Gospel of John: Asar was an alternative name for Osirus, Horus' father, who Horus raised from the dead. He was referred to as "the Asar," as a sign of respect. Translated into Hebrew, this is "El-Asar." The Romans added the prefix "us" to indicate a male name, producing "Elasarus." Over time, the "E" was dropped and "s" became "z," producing "Lazarus." 10 Transfigured: On a mountain. On a high mountain. Key address(es): Sermon on the Mount. Sermon on the Mount; Sermon on the Plain. Method of death By crucifixion. By crucifixion. Accompanied by: Two thieves. Two thieves. Burial In a tomb. In a tomb. Fate after death: Descended into Hell; resurrected after three days. Descended into Hell; resurrected after about 30 to 38 hours (Friday PM to presumably some time in Sunday AM) covering parts of three days. Resurrection announced by: Women. Women. Future: Reign for 1,000 years in the Millennium. Reign for 1,000 years in the Millennium. horizontal rule Comparison of some characteristics of Horus and Jesus: Characteristics Horus Yeshua of Nazareth, a.k.a. Jesus Nature" Regarded as a mythical character. Regarded as a 1st century CE human man-god. Main role: Savior of humanity. Savior of humanity. Status: God-man. God-man. Common portrayal: Virgin Isis holding the infant Horus. Virgin Mary holding the infant Jesus. Title: KRST, the anointed one. Christ, the anointed one. Other names: The good shepherd, the lamb of God, the bread of life, the son of man, the Word, the fisher, the winnower. The good shepherd, the lamb of God, the bread of life, the son of man, the Word, the fisher, the winnower. Zodiac sign: Associated with Pisces, the fish. Associated with Pisces, the fish. Main symbols: Fish, beetle, the vine, shepherd's crook. Fish, beetle, the vine, the shepherd's crook. horizontal rule Comparison of some teachings of Horus and Jesus: Characteristics Horus Yeshua of Nazareth, a.k.a. Jesus Criteria for salvation at the place of judgment: "I have given bread to the hungry man and water to the thirsty man and clothing to the naked person and a boat to the shipwrecked mariner." 11 "For I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in: Naked, and ye clothed me..." Matthew 25:35-36 (KJV). "I am" statements bullet "I am Horus in glory...I am the Lord of Light...I am the victorious one...I am the heir of endless time...I, even I, am he that knoweth the paths of heaven." 12 bullet "I am Horus, the Prince of Eternity." bullet "I am Horus who stepeth onward through eternity...Eternity and everlastingness is my name." bullet "I am the possessor of bread in Anu. I have bread in heaven with Ra." bullet "I am the light of the world....I am the way, the truth and the life." bullet "Before Abraham was, I am" bullet "Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, and today and forever." bullet "I am the living bread that came down from heaven." (From the Gospel of John) horizontal rule Was Horus born of a virgin?: Acharya S. quotes priest and author Joseph McCabe: "Whatever we make of the original myth…Isis seems to have been originally a virgin (or, perhaps, sexless) goddess, and in the later period of Egyptian religion she was again considered a virgin goddess, demanding very strict abstinence from her devotees. It is at this period, apparently, that the birthday of Horus was annually celebrated, about December 25th, in the temples. As both Macrobius and the Christian writer [of the "Paschal Chronicle"] say, a figure of Horus as a baby was laid in a manger, in a scenic reconstruction of a stable, and a statue of Isis was placed beside it. Horus was, in a sense, the Savior of mankind. He was their avenger against the powers of darkness; he was the light of the world. His birth-festival was a real Christmas before Christ. 13,14 Acharya S. mentions a number of other references to Egyptian virgin births in her essay on Horus. 14. James Frazer writes in The Golden Bough: 15 "The ritual of the nativity, as it appears to have been celebrated in Syria and Egypt, was remarkable. The celebrants retired into certain inner shrines, from which at midnight they issued with a loud cry, "The Virgin has brought forth! The light is waxing!" The Egyptians even represented the new-born sun by the image of an infant which on his birthday, the winter solstice, they brought forth and exhibited to his worshippers. No doubt the Virgin who thus conceived and bore a son on the twenty-fifth of December was the great Oriental goddess whom the Semites called the Heavenly Virgin or simply the Heavenly Goddess." 16 On the other hand, Christian theologian Ward Gasque surveyed twenty contemporary Egyptologists. He asked them about the relationship whether Horus experienced a virgin birth. Ten responded; they all agreed that there is no evidence that Horus was born of a virgin 2 horizontal rule Did Horus have 12 disciples? Glenn Miller wrote: "...my research in the academic literature does not surface this fact. I can find references to four 'disciples'--variously called the semi-divine HERU-SHEMSU ('Followers of Horus'). I can find references to sixteen human followers. And I can find reference to an unnumbered group of followers called mesniu/mesnitu ('blacksmiths') who accompanied Horus in some of his battles. ... But I cannot find twelve anywhere." 17 Of course, the early Christian movement might have imported the concept of disciples from Egypt and changed the number so that the number of Jesus' disciples matched the number of the tribes of Israel. Gasque's survey came up blank on the matter of Horus' disciples as well.
Early Morning Pundit
10/28/2008 4:48 PM UTC
I am am truly enjoying your shows! Be Blessed!
ambeingme
10/24/2008 8:42 PM UTC
hi, this is ambeingme- why can't the president be like me,,, thanks for noticing and i'll join in tonight and enjoy your show.. bwell, c2
L.A. STEEL SHOW
10/24/2008 8:03 PM UTC
Thank you for your offer of friendship. I would be pleased to join your friends list and be on your show. If you and your co host would like to be guests on my Wednesday night show feel free to call in any Wednesday night, when Leila and I concentrate totally on political issues. We would look forward to your input. Thursday and Friday nights we concentrate exclusively on esoteric issues , but we would look forward to your call to discuss your questions,or interests pertaining to the program's subject matter. Thank you again for your invitation. L.A. Steel
Annie Rose Bio-Med
10/19/2008 8:18 PM UTC
GREAT show title, looking forward ti all of your shows! Annie Rose
starlav
10/18/2008 6:05 AM UTC
congrats Carolyn - I will try to catch the next show looks like a great place to vioce your opinion and be heard.
You are not logged in. Please log in to write a comment.
Politics for Her is a non-partisan radio show that meshes the blood-sport-of-politics and political fodder into a serious substantive issue oriented show, but listeners will appreciate the entertainment value of the show. Which Monica, host and Carolyn, co-host certainly trust the audience will agree. The show’s targeted audiences are women of all ages, backgrounds and or party affiliation. We too, encourage men to lend their voices to speak about issues that they are passionate about; we want them in the game too. Our missions are to create constituency synergies, to become engaged in the process and to raise the bar in the world of politics, and enjoy lots of political satire. The age-old-barriers of public servants’ competitive personas, their lack of policy compromises, and their lack of humility, has consistently delivered us status quo politics. As Americans, we deserve better than what we’ve received to date. So, two college classmates Monica and Carolyn founded the radio show. Monica a Communications major and Politics minor,and Carolyn a doubled major Psychology and Communications, and she too minored in Politics. The two women had enrolled in a non-traditional collegiate program and met in a Spanish class during which time Monica were besieged with her course work. But, Carolyn were the answer to the overwhelmed student’s Spanish missteps; during the class the two teamed up to aspire to inspire each other. And, their uncanny diligence proved they would succeed and as an old adage notes, the rest is history. Early on, the two appeared to be like-minded in a number of ways. Subsequently, they continued to cultivate a friendship, they engaged in vast conversations about humanistic concerns, entrepreneurship, and politics. And, each woman enjoyed it immensely; the energy from talking about blood boiling issues to lighter moments of humor about political gaffes by politicians and the media were enthralling! Carolyn and Monica were enamored.
Original Air Date: 12/10/2008 12:00 AM UTC
Original Air Date: 12/9/2008 12:00 AM UTC
Original Air Date: 12/6/2008 12:00 AM UTC
Original Air Date: 12/5/2008 12:00 AM UTC
Original Air Date: 12/4/2008 12:00 AM UTC
Original Air Date: 12/3/2008 12:00 AM UTC
Original Air Date: 11/22/2008 12:00 AM UTC
< Previous Episodes