The youngest of twelve children, Jacinta Faber was born in
Poughkeepsie, New York, and studied ancient history and Greek and Latin
classical literature at Vassar College. Speaking both English and Portuguese as a
child, Jacinta was named by her Portuguese-born parents in recognition
of St. Jacinto Marto, the young visionary of Our Lady of Fatima from the village of
Aljustrel, adjacent to the ancient ruins of the cultural center of Fabera.
Following college, Jacinta served for two years in the Indonesian wetlands
as a Peace Corps volunteer, helping to build a new public shoe factory and dig
individual water wells for exiled farming families. Later marrying Dr. Hemis Horsely,
a prolific gadget inventor from New Zealand, the two settled on a small farm near
Minburn, Iowa, where they have been raising buckwheat, peacock and ostrich, as
well as their nine children. Jacinta also freelances as an
automotive mechanic. A strong advocate of all forms of wind power, Jacinta and
her father have recently developed and patented a small car, named Rongo, that
uses only the wind as a power source. (OK, as you suspect by now, none of this
is true about Jacinta, but, see, she hasn't written her bio yet!) You can browse
through and read entries from Jacinta's
complete historical blog archives
here.
By Jacinta Faber on April 28, 2008
A gentleman named G.J. Warnock described empathy as "moral imagination." He viewed putting oneself in another's shoes as one of the components of a moral compass leading to the good life.
I am married to a philosopher, and as a family, we have spent many an evening around the dinner table discussing what living the good life means. When our kids were younger, our son tended to equate the good life with the number of toys he owned.
His acquisitiveness was scorned by his older sister, who thought that there must be more to living the good life than acquiring things. She seemed to be more on the path of developing her moral imagination.
An industrial wind project is challenging the moral imagination of my county. The situation reads as follows.
Read More ...
By Jacinta Faber on December 13, 2007
• "I was given the assignment to end this before it got too much worse."
• "Holy Spirit, please be with me."
• "God was with me, and I asked Him to be with me and He never left my side."
These statements were given by Jeanne Assam, a volunteer security guard for the megachurch "New Life Church" in Colorado Springs, Colorado, after shooting Matthew Murray. Mr. Murray was on a shooting rampage at the time Ms. Assam intervened. He had killed four people at the megachurch and a missionary training school before turning the gun on himself. Ms. Assam, a new Christian, strongly believed that God was with her, guiding her to stop any further killings.
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By Jacinta Faber on July 30, 2007
Dear Mr. Lowry,
I am writing this letter in response to your commentary, Weather more tame than wind arguments.
There were several errors made in your comments concerning my part in opposing the proposed wind project. One is a technical one. The quote you used from my open letter was published in the Ellis County Environmental Awareness blog and was never published in the HDN, though you claimed all of your quotes came from the HDN.
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By Jacinta Faber on April 22, 2007
Oh, for the days of "the Big Boss" from Kansas City, MO. Ted Pendergast with help from his brother Michael had become one of the great political machines of the twentieth century. From stuffing ballots to road construction, they took care of their own. The Pendergast machine can be credited for Harry Truman's ascendancy to the White House. Truman with gratitude once stated that he loved Michael, "As I did my own daddy."
Some of us in Ellis County are in the throes of a wind fight, and we sorely need a daddy, but all we are getting is ...
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By Jacinta Faber on April 1, 2007
"The sounds were the soft 'whoosh' of the blades as they rotated in the wind, and the gentle humming of the machinery...nothing more than a lullaby, a sound that might lull you to sleep", reads an excerpt from Darrel Miller's recent column (Hays Daily News, 1 April 2007).
Wind generated electrical power is clean. Why then are we fighting it?
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