“Warm Bodies” (Spoiler Alert)

Warm Bodies is not a great film, but it is a fun film. It has a cute turn on the traditional zombie movie. In this case, a human, as it were, infects the zombies and they start to turn human again. The film includes a few theologically suggestive features. To wit, the main zombie character, R, . . . . Continue Reading »

Cardinal Luis Antonio Tagle for Pope?

Many of you may have wondered why I haven’t endorsed a candidate for the next Bishop of Rome. For one thing, I don’t know a lot about some of the most prominent possibilities. For another, it’s not like I get to vote or that I ever talk to any of those charged with voting. For . . . . Continue Reading »

Justifying Paternalism

Cass Sunstein reviews Sarah Conly’s Justifying Coercive Paternalism in the latest New York Review of Books : Her starting point is that in light of the recent findings, we should be able to agree that Mill was quite wrong about the competence of human beings as choosers. “We are too fat, . . . . Continue Reading »

On the Square Today

R.R. Reno on Garry Wills’ latest book : Why Priests?  falls below his usual low standards. The main thesis is that priests ruin everything. They’re power-hungry monsters who’ve taken over the Church, destroying the affirming, companionable, and egalitarian message of Jesus. . . . . Continue Reading »

Values Voters for Obama

There is a growing political divide between the irreligious and religious. A recent Pew study  shows that those who have no religious affiliation (Nones) are the single most ideologically committed cohort of white Americans, rivaled only by Evangelical Protestants. They overwhelmingly support . . . . Continue Reading »

First Links — 2.25.13

Lost in the Cosmos at Thirty Peter Lawler, Big Think The Right’s Reefer Madness Peter Hitchens, American Spectator An Awful Loss, A Daunting Task Timothy P. Carney, Washington Examiner Post-Liberalism: Death of a Dream? Ted V. McAllister, University Bookman The Protestant Pope Nic Davidson, . . . . Continue Reading »