May 11, 2011

What Made California Great?

That is the question that California Family Council will be asking some of
you in the coming months. CFC will be conducting polling and focus groups to
gain your perspectives on our state. We will apply this information to
create the messages most attractive to citizens and, as income allows, print
and distribute attractive, reasoned, and motivational information into
targeted sectors of our state’s population.

Today I continue the strategic work with a professional pollster in our quest to identify the most effective set of messages to take to our audience. You see, we want people to vote according to their beliefs in the importance of freedom, work, marriage and family, faith, and life. In California’s recent history, far too many of us have been tricked into trusting candidates whose promises have been empty, and whose beliefs are completely contrary to our own. 

If you’re interested in reading it, columnist Dan Walters gives us an historic perspective of the decline of the Legislature’s make-up in this May 9 article. Walters’ closing remark is this: “brain-dead inanity. . .reigns supreme.” Sad, and true.

California Family Council will be distributing messages with a clear worldview bias, and we will be doing so unapologetically because it is the Christian worldview that underlies California’s and America’s confidence, and productivity, and generosity, and liberty.

There is good and bad. There is right and wrong. There is liberty and there is oppression. Join with California Family Council and the forming coalition of people and organizations to bring positive, “can do” messages to a population that is being oppressed by wrong-minded leadership.

We need your help to accomplish the plan. As you are able, please make a contribution to assist us in the many facets of outreach, including research, print costs, social media, and volunteer coordination.

And please, add this project to your prayers, as we need the help and direction of the Creator. Thank you.

In anticipation,
Ron Prentice