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What’s That About Misogyny?

Thanks to the “First Links” below, I see that Ross Douthat answered some of the critics of his ” More Babies, Please ” column before I got around to writing about it yesterday . But it would be really instructive to read Sarah Sentilles’ ” Do Not Have Sex with . . . . Continue Reading »

“That’s a Family!”

. . . is the title of a propaganda video being shown in some public elementary schools. It bills itself as a general exploration of the many varieties of what a family can consist of—-you know, cross-racial couples, adoption and guardianship, families that speak Spanish at home. And . . . . Continue Reading »

Disabilities Treaty Coming Back?

MSNBC was positively crackling with outrage yesterday that the U.S. Senate rejected the U.N. treaty for persons with disabilities. John Kerry, the treaty’s Senate shepherd, said it was “the saddest day of his 28 years in the Senate.” He was flabbergasted that the Senate did not . . . . Continue Reading »

First Links — 12.6.12

Logos Severed from Mythos James Matthew Wilson, Anamnesis “Great Art Survives”: An Interview with Dave Brubeck Ian Marcus Corbin,  Commonweal On the Aims and Ends of Dialogue Peter Berger, The American Interest Healthcare Law Architect Heads to Big Pharma Natasha Lennard, Salon . . . . Continue Reading »

Happy Repeal Day! [Updated]

Seventy-nine years ago today, the 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, repealing old dry and dreadful, was ratified. What better way to celebrate than with this festive pomegranate cocktail ? Pomegranate Poinsettia 1 oz. Pomegranate Liqueur 1 oz. Cointreau 1 oz. Orange Juice 3 oz. Champagne . . . . Continue Reading »

Dave Brubeck Dead at 91

The great American jazzman Dave Brubeck has died a day short of his ninety-second birthday. Many may not know that Brubeck was a Catholic convert who actually composed a Mass even before he became a Catholic. The Mass had been commissioned by Ed Murray, editor of Our Sunday Visitor . From PBS, here . . . . Continue Reading »

The Common Law and the Constitution

Is the common law an obsolete relic of our history as an English colony, or is it still a principle of sound constitutional interpretation? Does it protect citizens’ liberty, or undermine it? How does common law interact with the evolution of our culture and legal system? The Library of Law . . . . Continue Reading »

On the Square Today

George Weigel on the universal plague of child sexual abuse : While the Savile case was breaking, reports of large-scale sexual abuse in Boy Scout troops were being released by court order. Those crimes, plus the extensive (if largely ignored) research on sexual abuse in U.S. public schools, plus . . . . Continue Reading »

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