Goodreads helps you follow your favorite authors. Be the first to learn about new releases!
Start by following Dale Hanson Bourke.
Showing 1-12 of 12
“It’s not so much that we are losing our identities, but rather that we are no longer embracing false identities. If we hold on to what once defined us, we will miss out on the authentic identity we are being called to.”
― Second Calling: Finding Passion & Purpose for the Rest of Your Life
― Second Calling: Finding Passion & Purpose for the Rest of Your Life
“Listen to your heart.. you are becoming more fully and completely who you were created to be.
It is a whisper that says you are being called to something new. It is a gentle voice that seems to say, ‘Ah, now I have your attention.’ It is a voice that has been patiently waiting to speak truth you would be able to hear.
We are no longer in that part of life when we simply respond to parents, children, husbands, jobs, the PTA, and recycling schedules. We are not spending every single minute trying to keep everyone else happy.”
― Second Calling: Finding Passion & Purpose for the Rest of Your Life
It is a whisper that says you are being called to something new. It is a gentle voice that seems to say, ‘Ah, now I have your attention.’ It is a voice that has been patiently waiting to speak truth you would be able to hear.
We are no longer in that part of life when we simply respond to parents, children, husbands, jobs, the PTA, and recycling schedules. We are not spending every single minute trying to keep everyone else happy.”
― Second Calling: Finding Passion & Purpose for the Rest of Your Life
“How often are drugs brought across the border from Mexico? Getting drugs from Mexico into the United States is big business, and Mexican cartels spare little expense or violence to accomplish their mission. One estimate puts the annual value of drugs trafficked into the United States from Mexico at $39 billion.”
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
“The principle is this:
Ask yourself, “Is this my problem or not?” There are 3 types of business in the world: mine, your, and God’s. We have to ask, “Whose business is it?”. I had decided to make someone else’s business and God’s business my business. My control tendencies were often lurking beneath the surface.”
― Second Calling: Finding Passion & Purpose for the Rest of Your Life
Ask yourself, “Is this my problem or not?” There are 3 types of business in the world: mine, your, and God’s. We have to ask, “Whose business is it?”. I had decided to make someone else’s business and God’s business my business. My control tendencies were often lurking beneath the surface.”
― Second Calling: Finding Passion & Purpose for the Rest of Your Life
“What’s wrong with the current U.S. immigration system? The current U.S. immigration system is neither comprehensive nor internally consistent, creating confusion and inconsistencies for those who want to legally enter the United States. Some lawmakers contend that the problems with the current system actually help encourage illegal immigration since in some cases it is more difficult to navigate the legal system than to enter the country illegally or overstay a visa.”
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
“What happens to children whose parents are deported? According to the Shattered Families Report, of the 396,906 persons deported in 2011, 22 percent were the parents of children who are American citizens. More than 5,000 of those American citizen children have been placed in foster care as a result of deportations.6 Individuals who have been deported have almost no ability to petition for parental rights or to be reunited with their children unless those children are able to return to the parent’s country. Some children have even been put up for adoption when state courts have ruled that they were abandoned by their parents as a result of deportation.”
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
“If someone is in the United States without legal status, isn’t that person a criminal? Being in the United States without documentation is a civil—not a criminal—offense, so under federal law, individuals living in the United States without proper documentation are not classified as criminals. The punishment may be deportation, but unless the person has committed a crime, he or she is not subject to criminal punishment.”
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
“Economists say some sectors of the economy would suffer greatly and even collapse without undocumented workers.”
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
“Spend the second half of our lives working less about what we do and more about who we become.”
― Second Calling: Finding Passion & Purpose for the Rest of Your Life
― Second Calling: Finding Passion & Purpose for the Rest of Your Life
“A number of studies show that immigrants generally have a lower level of criminal activity and incarceration than the general population, even when income and education levels are considered.3”
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
“My hope is that this book will help us all make those decisions with more facts than emotions, and more awareness than fear.”
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
“Nativism is a movement that promotes favored status for established citizens or residents of a nation over newcomers or immigrants. Nativists typically oppose immigration and support restricting the legal status of specific ethnic groups because they view them as harming the culture of the host nation.”
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers
― Immigration: Tough Questions, Direct Answers





