Labor’s End

Writing in the New Republic , Richard Yeselson examines ” the long, slow death spiral of America’s labor movement ,” especially in the wake of the unions’ Wisconsin failure. Fifty years ago, Yeselson writes: People, for better or worse, knew what unions  did . . . . Continue Reading »

On the Square Today

R.R. Reno on income inequality : Sometimes the editors at the New York Times get it right, even when they’re wrong. In a May 26 editorial they opined that Democratic attacks on Mitt Romney’s career as head of Bain Capital are fair game: “Private equity, rarely by design, has created . . . . Continue Reading »

Nobody Knows . . .

One of my guilty pleasures is The Big Bang Theory, a sitcom about a group of socially inept science geniuses.  Having walked the halls of academe for over two decades, I can associate friends with the primary characters.  One scene caught my eye recently, where a main character plays a . . . . Continue Reading »

Civil Calvinist Conversations

A group of Southern Baptists has issued a statement pushing back against the prominent strain of Calvinism in the denomination: Every generation of Southern Baptists has the duty to articulate the truths of its faith with particular attention to the issues that are impacting contemporary mission . . . . Continue Reading »

First Links — 6.11.12

How the Drive-in Theater Helped Create the Megachurch Megan Garber,  The Atlantic Eucharistic Congress Opens in Turbulent Ireland Patsy McGarry and Genevieve Carbery, Irish Times Political Withdrawal, Reconsidered Joseph Wood,   The Catholic Thing Russia, Syria, and the Long Lens of . . . . Continue Reading »

Moonrise Kingdom

Here’s a charming introduction to the film, emphasizing probably too much its Christian dimension. The (one emotionally and one completely) abandoned children carry civilization (literally and emotionally) with them in their escape to their own part of the island of New Penzane and remain . . . . Continue Reading »

Peter O’Toole and Wes Anderson

John P’s review below is exceptionally fine. Peter O’Toole is, of course, one of our most subtly manly actors. MY FAVORITE YEAR, for example. Movies I’ve seen lately. MEN IN BLACK 3—no alien character development at all (the strength of the first one). BLUE LIKE . . . . Continue Reading »