The Forever Virgins

Not sure how I missed this. Last month, the Boston Globe profiled several women in the archdiocese of Boston who have recently responded to one of the church’s oldest and perhaps most obscure vocations: consecrated virginity . . . . . Continue Reading »

A Few Words on Iran

1. I like the Iranian reformers more than I like the mass politics of solidarity by symbolism. 2. Imitating the right things for a people to say or do does not make those things the right ones for a President to do. 3. If Iran really has imported 5,000 Hezbollah enforcers, a more robust official US . . . . Continue Reading »

Suing Because Down Baby Was Not Aborted

A “wrongful birth” lawsuit has been filed in Oregon in which the child’s parents are suing because a test failed to reveal that their baby has Down, which had they known, would have resulted in abortion.  As I state in my post about this at Secondhand Smoke : This is not the . . . . Continue Reading »

Beekeeping for Christ

Our friend Annie, age thirteen, keeps bees. This is a fairly new project; just after Easter, having spent the school year engaged in bee research, she brought home her colony, buzzing furiously in a box on her lap, and established them in a little green glade in the woods around her house. Every day . . . . Continue Reading »

Hedgehogs and Flamingos in Tehran

The mystery about the Iranian elections, writes my old friend Daniel Pipes, is why the religious authorities who run the country decided to declare a massive victory for the crude and brutal Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, rather than advance the slick and deceptive Hossein Moussavi. One could read this as a . . . . Continue Reading »