Re: Ayn Rand on Christmas

Matthew , the greatest part about that Rand quote is how it shows how Randians and Keynsians basically agree in endorsing the central fallacy of twentieth-century economics: that the core drive of economic activity is the desire to consume, to gratify desires. She even praises Christmas because . . . . Continue Reading »

Required

Every person working for the Republican National Committee should be required to watch this ten minute clip of Henry Olsen every month.  Maybe every week.  If you have too much free time, watch the whole event. . . . . Continue Reading »

Ayn Rand on Christmas

“The best aspect of Christmas is the aspect usually decried by the mystics: the fact that Christmas has been  commercialized . The gift-buying . . . stimulates an enormous outpouring of ingenuity in the creation of products devoted to a single purpose: to give men pleasure. And . . . . Continue Reading »

How Teachers Ought to Grade Students

John Willson, professor emeritus of history at Hillsdale College, reflects at the Imaginative Conservative on “the chief cruelty of our profession: assigning our students to paradise, purgatory, or the inferno with the stroke of a pen.” He reminds us : Grades as we know them are a . . . . Continue Reading »

“First Freedom” on PBS Tonight

Tonight on (I expect) many PBS stations you can see a documentary called ” First Freedom: The Fight for Religious Liberty .” (It’s on from 8:00 to 9:30 p.m. on Philadelphia’s WHYY; check local listings.) I am not endorsing the program, since I want to see it first, but I am . . . . Continue Reading »

On the Square Today

Elizabeth Scalia on doing better with the hard questions : In fact, Benedict XVI—who goes by the handle @Pontifex on Twitter—had answered a “hard” question, because the life of faith turns all questions into “hard” ones. The answers become hard, too, mostly because on . . . . Continue Reading »

Christmas at McDonald’s

Which would be more depressing: eating at McDonald’s on Christmas Day, or working at McDonald’s on Christmas Day? If I were a Marxist, I’d say the latter.  If I were a libertarian defender of the Lochner decision, such as the author of this pretty-good and definitely . . . . Continue Reading »

Suburban Noel

– after Geoffrey Hill Passing a new subdivision, late fall: already the arms race of tall spruce, elegant luminaria, as winner-take-all light displays tart up the days’ values. The nearby landfill will prove a windfall for three or more wise lords of revenue. . . . . Continue Reading »