The recent leak to NBC News of a Justice Department white paper, on the authority to conduct lethal operations against U.S. citizens abroad if they are enemy combatants in our war against al-Qaida, has touched off another round of controversy about the lawfulness of our tactics… . Continue Reading»
For the last decade, some social scientists have been arguing that happiness measurements should replace or supplement established economic standards to judge a societys success. Many environmentalists also support the idea as a way of putting lipstick on policies that could slow down economic growth. And now, the idea is deemed ready to leave the ivory tower for implementation as government policy… . Continue Reading»
In the February 2013 issue of The New Criterion, James Bowman, media critic for that indispensable periodical, comments on a media scandal currently brewing in Great Britain. The trouble is, most of the panjandrums in the London press dont regard it as a media scandal at all. To them the blow-up started off as a political scandal and transmogrified into a police scandal”but, since few people on this side of the Atlantic have ever heard of these goings-on, I must first describe the events in question… . Continue Reading»
The religion wars in the United States have officially gone commercial. In contrast to past religious controversies that have centered on questions like prayer in public schools and religious symbols on government property, recent conflicts between law and religion have quite a different feel because of their unmistakable commercial component… . Continue Reading»
Ban Contraception? the banner ad said, urging viewers to click it in order to tell Congress to support womens health! The suggestion that cultural conservatives want to make birth control illegal is risible. Most social conservatives, being Evangelicals, have zero problem with contraception whatsoever, and those Catholics who obey the Churchs teaching on contraception make zero effort to outlaw it… . Continue Reading»
In a pair of high-profile cases scheduled for oral argument in March, the Supreme Court of the United States will weigh in on the current political and legal debate about same-sex marriage. As novel as it all seems, the issue of same-sex marriage first came before the high court over four decades ago in the little-known case of Baker v. Nelson (1972)… . Continue Reading»
For more than thirty years its been my privilege to explore the Catholic Church in all its extraordinary variety and diversity. Ive traveled from inner-city parishes to the corridors of the Vatican; from the barrios of Bogotá to the streets of Dublin; across the United States and throughout Europe, Latin America, Oceania, and the Holy Land… . Continue Reading»
It should come as no surprise to anyone that Protestants place a high value on Scripture. Examples of this attitude abound: the popular Awana program gives an award to second graders who have memorized 150 Bible verses. Bible quizzing effectively makes high schoolers memorize whole epistles. Teachers and parents teach children their Saviors voice by drill … Continue Reading»
In 1976, Joseph Ratzinger”then still a professor”suggested it might be possible to interpret [the Augsburg Confession (CA)”i.e., the primary Lutheran confession] under the laws of the empire as a catholic confession. He continued: Efforts are underway to achieve a Catholic recognition of the CA or, more correctly, a recognition of the CA as catholic, and thereby to establish the catholicity of the churches of the CA, which makes possible a corporate union while the differences remain. … Continue Reading»
When baseball legend Roberto Clemente died in a plane crash in 1972, on a mission of mercy to victims of a Nicaraguan earthquake, the world not only lost a great man, but someone with extraordinary dreams. Well before his passing, Clemente had plans to open up clinics, schools, charities and an ambitious sports complex in his native Puerto Rico, to help rescue underprivileged and misdirected youth… . Continue Reading»