Live Action strikes again. A New York PP counselor is told that the client wants to abort a girl. The PP representative is cooperative, non judgmental, and professionally aloof. I embedded this example above, because unlike the last video released, it contains the . . . . Continue Reading »
Yes, it’s true. I love New York, and for all sorts of reasons, among which is Mayor Bloomberg. Matthew Cantirino’s posting draws attention to the ironies of Bloomberg’s neo-puritanism. When it comes to abortion we’re not to invade anybody’s private choices: . . . . Continue Reading »
Peter Lawler offers some thoughts on New York mayor Michael Bloomberg’s proposed ban on large sugary drinks, seeing it as a somewhat intelligible proposal and yet also further evidence of ascendant Belmontian neo-Puritanism: Bloomberg’s policy is full of barely concealed class . . . . Continue Reading »
We discussed this legislation earlier, but I think there is more to add. Legislation in New Jersey would legalize commercial gestational carriage, as dehumanizing a term for a woman carrying a baby this side of “human brood mare.” From The Record story:Supporters argue that these . . . . Continue Reading »
Leroy Huizenga on why Catholics care about Christians : he University of Mary defines its mission and identity as Christian, Catholic, and Benedictine. Its Christian Leadership Center, which I direct, is intended to foster relationships among a wide variety of Christians, from Catholics . . . . Continue Reading »
Yes, the Brookings Institution: On May 19, 1992, as the presidential campaign season was heating up, Vice President Dan Quayle delivered a family-values speech that came to define him nearly as much as his spelling talents. Speaking at the Commonwealth Club of California, he chided Murphy . . . . Continue Reading »
Two days ago, Bob Dylan received the Presidential Medal of Freedom. And once again we saw the tendency of American liberals to misunderstand a man who has refused to be enlisted in their causes. President Obama remarked that “No one ever picks up a guitar, or fights a disease, or starts a . . . . Continue Reading »
Big news on the tomato front: They have more genes than human beings! From the NYT story:The tomato, whose genome has just now been decoded, turns out to be one well-endowed vegetable, possessing 31,760 genes. This rich legacy, possibly a reflection of the disaster that killed . . . . Continue Reading »
At the height of the great Embryonic Stem Cell Hype, Hwang Woo-suk fraudulently claimed to have created human cloned embryos and derived stem cells therefrom. He paid a price in reputation but not his freedom, despite obtaining research grants under false pretenses. Now, another Korean stem . . . . Continue Reading »