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left_flag Friday, October 14
Friday, October 14, 2016

Welcome to another Weekend Edition show. Today’s show is hosted by Penna Dexter and Kelly Shackelford. Together they will look at the top stories in the news this week and give you their point of view.

Penna Dexter
Penna Dexter

Point of View Co-Host, Penna Dexter frequently sits in as guest host for Kerby Anderson. Her weekly commentaries air on the Bott Radio Network. Penna’s heart is in educating and encouraging Christians to influence the culture and politics. She worked as a consultant overseeing the launch and production of the Family Research Council’s nationally syndicated radio program, Washington Watch Weekly. For eight yearsRead More

Guests
Kelly Shackelford
Kelly Shackelford
President and CEO - First Liberty Institute
Mr. Shackelford is a constitutional scholar who has argued before the United States Supreme Court, testified before the U.S. House and Senate on constitutional issues, and has won three state landmark First Amendment and religious liberty cases in the past few years alone. He was recently named one of the 25 greatest Texas lawyers of the past quarter century by Texas Lawyer, and is the recipient of the prestigious William Bentley Ball Award for Life and Religious Freedom Defense for his leadership and pioneering work protecting religious freedom.
Chabad of Irvine
Orthodox Jewish Synagogue Attacked by Special Interest Group Before Yom Kippur

First Liberty Institute is defending the right of a small Orthodox Jewish synagogue in California to perform a religious ceremony in accordance with their beliefs. An animal rights organization filed a federal lawsuit against the synagogue, seeking to prevent members of the Jewish community from engaging in a historic Yom Kippur ritual called a kaporos ceremony, where the atonement of sins is contemplated through prayer and the kosher killing of a chicken. On October 11, 2016, First Liberty asked a federal judge to lift a Temporary Restraining Order that prevented the synagogue members from practicing the religious ceremony during Yom Kippur. Just hours before sundown signaled the start of Yom Kippur, the judge granted First Liberty’s request and lifted the order.
Corporate Witch Hunts
Consumer products giant Procter & Gamble (P&G) is hardly immune to pressure from LGBT ("lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender") activists. They have boasted to their shareholders about treating "sexual orientation" and "gender identity and expression" as protected categories, and about receiving a perfect score on the pro-LGBT Human Rights Campaign's "Corporate Equality Index." They have even endorsed "U.S. federal legislation that would prohibit workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity" (presumably, the dangerous so-called "Equality Act").
FBI, DOJ roiled by Comey, Lynch decision to let Clinton slide by on emails, says insider
The decision to let Hillary Clinton off the hook for mishandling classified information has roiled the FBI and Department of Justice, with one person closely involved in the year-long probe telling FoxNews.com that career agents and attorneys on the case unanimously believed the Democratic presidential nominee should have been charged.

The source, who spoke to FoxNews.com on the condition of anonymity, said FBI Director James Comey’s dramatic July 5 announcement that he would not recommend to the Attorney General’s office that the former secretary of state be charged left members of the investigative team dismayed and disgusted. More than 100 FBI agents and analysts worked around the clock with six attorneys from the DOJ’s National Security Division, Counter Espionage Section, to investigate the case.
Should Christians Vote for Trump?
This question should hardly require an essay, but let’s face it: We’re living in strange times. America is in trouble. Over this past year many of Donald Trump’s comments have made me almost literally hopping ...
4 Times Conservatives Lost a Major Supreme Court Case by a Single Vote
Sunday night’s second presidential debate underscored the importance of the next Supreme Court justice, as the candidates and questioners alike recognized that the fate of the federal courts rests in the next president’s hands.

The high court has been closely divided on many contentious issues in recent years, and the next justice could change the development and application of the law for decades. As former Attorney General Ed Meese has stated, “No president exercises any power more far-reaching, more likely to influence his legacy, than the selection of federal judges.”
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