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The Future of Religious Toleration

This  is just a straw in the wind, but it’s nonetheless very disturbing.  Will adherents of traditional morality, who seek only to protect their view of marriage (and not in any other way legally to stigmatize homosexuality) be relegated to the margins of society, treated the way . . . . Continue Reading »

Evangelicals and Santorum

Here’s the basic data from the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life : Among the 57% of Iowa caucus-goers who describe themselves as born-again or evangelical Christians, Santorum finished in first place with 32% support. Ron Paul garnered 18% of the evangelical vote, while Romney, Newt . . . . Continue Reading »

2012 Schmemann Lecture

Dr. Margaret Barker will be giving the 2012 Fr. Alexander Schmemann Lecture at St. Vladimir’s Theological Seminary in Yonkers on Sunday, January 29th at 4:00 p.m. The lecture will be titled “Our Great High Priest: The Church as the New Temple.” Barker, according to the . . . . Continue Reading »

Grumpy Thoughts

1.  I’m not sure it is good policy, but Santorum’s policy of no corporate income taxes on manufacturers, might do him some good when added to the stuff about his biography, etc.  He might be able to rally a constituency for working class-oriented, right-leaning industrial . . . . Continue Reading »

Gingrich After Iowa

To balance yesterday’s rather optimistic “On the Square” article The Potomac and the Tiber —I don’t myself see much reason to believe that Gingrich has been affected by Catholic social teaching—here is a different view of Gingrich’s character, Newt the . . . . Continue Reading »

On to New Hampshire

1. Ron Paul was deprived of his night to shine. Given his organization, enthusiasm, his huge number of crossovers and first-timers, his showing was disappointing. And it’s going to have been his best night. So let me repeat that this guy is no danger to America, because he has no chance of . . . . Continue Reading »

My Near Perfect 2011 Predictions

Every year, the Center for Bioethics and Culture asks me to predict the next year’s events in bioethics.  Each year, I comply—and generally have a pretty good record of seeing the events that our way come. But last year, I scored close to perfect. That’s because I bought a . . . . Continue Reading »

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