Don’t Even Think About It

Br. Thomas More Garrett, writing at Dominicana , points out an irony in the new California statute proscribing the use of “reparative therapy” by anyone under the age of eighteen: The legislation is sweeping in effect. What if an individual under the age of eighteen  . . . . Continue Reading »

On the Square Today

R.R. Reno on the embarrassment of the Catholic Left : There they go again. The usual gang of Catholic theology professors has signed a manifesto, “On all of our shoulders: A Catholic Call to Protect the Endangered Common Good.” It claims to warn us of the grave danger posed by Congressman . . . . Continue Reading »

Goodbye to Glocamorra

My friend Mark Barrett sends the link to  Goodbye to Glocamorra , 1968 documentary from Irish television on the Irish neighborhood of Inwood, on the north end of Manhattan. (Mark has the rare pleasure of seeing his father as a young man. He appears about nine minutes in, riding around the . . . . Continue Reading »

First Links — 10.15.12

Is “Whom” History? The Economist Mark Noll & George Marsden on America’s Religious Heritage Justin Taylor, Between Two Worlds Gospel and Culture After Vatican II Tracey Rowland, ABC Religion & Ethics Suing over Circumcision—in New York Seth Berkman, Jewish Daily . . . . Continue Reading »

Pussy Riot and WEIRD Values

Last week’s post about WEIRD values (that’s “Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic”) drew a number of comments. Readers focused on the implications for the West’s relations with the Muslim world. It’s worth pointing out, though, that the clash is not . . . . Continue Reading »

Kalanges on Radical Orthodoxy

Over at CLR Forum , Notre Dame’s Kristine Kalanges is having a discussion with me and my colleague Marc DeGirolami about Radical Orthodoxy, an intellectual movement that originated in 1990s Britain, and its implications for political theory. Kristine argues that Radical Orthodoxy can provide . . . . Continue Reading »

Right but Naive at the Washington Post

Last week, at Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C., the Associate Provost for Diversity and Inclusion, Dr. Angela McCaskill, was placed on administrative leave  after it came to light that she had signed a petition at her church to put Question 6 on the ballot in her home state of . . . . Continue Reading »

It’s Just A Little Thing But…

As Rich Lowry points out over at National Review, Obama’s job approval is down to 48% in both the Rasmussen and Gallup tracking polls. His RCP job approval average is 49% which is at the low end of where he has been since the Democratic convention (though the movement has been within a very, . . . . Continue Reading »