Is IVF a Human Right?

The abortion license, ironically, helped lead directly to a view that there is a fundamental right to have children.  And to be sure, people should not be forced to be sterilized, or to take birth control, or have abortions.  Hello People’s Republic of China!But those are . . . . Continue Reading »

Steyn on Protests

I’ve been trying to figure out how to write about this week’s incidents in the Middle East.  Pete has said some favorable things about our current president’s foreign policy, but for me said policy has been appallingly misguided.  I do not see its success.  Libya is . . . . Continue Reading »

Pete Is Right Below

On everything, but let me just say something about abortion. I don’t have time to get the links going. But: Comparatively moderate old-school Democratic women like Eleanor Clift and Cokie Roberts are loudly complaining that the Democratic convention was over-the-top on abortion. Certainly . . . . Continue Reading »

“How to Buy a Daughter”: Jasmeet Sidhu

at Slate: Megan Simpson always expected that she would be a mother to a daughter. She had grown up in a family of four sisters. She liked sewing, baking, and doing hair and makeup. She hoped one day to share these interests with a little girl whom she could dress in pink. Simpson, a labor and . . . . Continue Reading »

City, Empire, Church, Nation

Pierre Manent, an eminent French political theorist, has a lengthy essay in City Journal in which he meditates on the political forms which both created and are eroded by modernity: Today in Europe, civic activity is feeble, the religious Word almost inaudible. Yet as we noted at the outset, . . . . Continue Reading »

Brain Death Disputes

Shlomo Zuckier presents an interesting variety of Jewish perspectives on brain death at Jewish Ideas Daily.  A brief definition before jumping in: Brain death occurs when a person’s brain activity, including that of the brain stem (which controls the respiratory and cardiovascular . . . . Continue Reading »