Sorry Democrats

In Who’s Sorry Now? , Elizabeth Scalia asks what Democrats are not so ostentatiously sorry as they were in 2004.  She suggests, in today’s first “On the Square” article, that they may have seen something they’re actually sorry about. . . . . Continue Reading »

Overheard at Yale: Pomocon Ontology II

[Conclusion of the astute synopsis by Mr. Entel, followed by his even more astute questions:] Plato, Hancock contends, enacts this yoke between being and knowing by seemingly affirming the simple superiority of theory to practice, thus suppressing the question of the relation between the good of . . . . Continue Reading »

2010 postdiction

unlike peter, i never predict an election. but i do postdict. here is an account of the election that will shortly appear in the crb Facts speak for themselves. The Democratic Party under Barack Hussein Obama in 2010 suffered the greatest defeat for a newly elected president in a midterm since the . . . . Continue Reading »

Robert Zoellick is Magnificently Right

(Crossposted from blog.atimes.net)The World Bank president got it exactly right:HONG KONG (MarketWatch) –- The president of the World Bank said in a newspaper editorial Monday that the Group of 20 leading economies should consider adopting a global reserve currency based on gold as part of . . . . Continue Reading »

Afternoon Links — 11.8.10

The Last of the Legendary Mitfords , now the Duchess of Devonshire, tells the story of her fascinating family, which among the sisters included one novelist, one Communist, one Fascist, one admirer of Hitler, and herself. Millions and millions of people died in the “Bloodlands” of . . . . Continue Reading »

The Most Depressing Statistic in America

Forget the unemployment rate or level of GNP, if you want one statistic that reflects the level of decline in our country you have to look no further than the percentage of out-of-wedlock births : As the issue of black unwed parenthood inches into public discourse, Carroll is . . . . Continue Reading »