Heres a Rooseveltian way to address unemployment now at 1930s levels: Lets create a National Infrastructure Corps to make urgently-needed repairs to roads and bridges, and put to work the disproportionately blue-collar army of unemployed. According to Shadow Government Statistics, a website that constructs alternate data measures, 22 percent of the workforce is under- or unemployed, right up there with the worst of the Great Depression… . Continue Reading »
If one were permitted to make all the ballads, said the eighteenth century Scottish politician Andrew Fletcher, one need not care who should make the laws of a nation. If he were transported to our time, even Fletcher would be surprised by how much music influences our culture. He would be even more amazed”and thoroughly appalled”by the degenerates who write our nations songs… . Continue Reading »
On June 30, 1980, the U.S. Supreme Court issued its decision in Harris v. McRae and upheld the constitutionality of the Hyde Amendment, which had prohibited federal funding for Medicaid abortions since 1976. Three decades later, Harris v. McRae remains the pro-life movements most important legal victory since Roe v. Wade created a right to abortion in 1973… . Continue Reading »
A too-long-undiagnosed bout with Lyme Disease has left me challenged with arthritis and some neurological damage. The arthritis has its uses: I can predict rain, and the pain gives me something to offer up in prayer, or as penance. Not so the neurological issues. At the peak of my illness I was unable to figure out how to do the dishes … Continue Reading »
I hardly ever lock my door”which makes me, I think, a pretty extreme example of a freeloader. I may be wrong, of course. Perhaps lots of people dont lock their doors. It cant be so many that the word gets around. If too many of us didnt lock our doors, then the criminals would lose their assumption that the average door is locked. But as long as enough people lock their doors, I can ride along on the locked assumption. Even in New York… . … . Continue Reading »
On June 28, the Supreme Court released the decisions that finished the business of the year. Notable among them was the judgment handed down in McDonald v. Chicago on the Second Amendment and the right to bear arms. Just two years earlier a slim majority of the Court affirmed for the first time that the plain words of the Amendment meant, in fact, what layers of long articles in the law reviews could not quite explain away… . Continue Reading »
When he died from a spear wound in June 363 AD, while on campaign in Persia, the Emperor Julian was only thirty-two years old. His reign as Augustus had lasted just nineteen months. His great project to restore the ancient faith of the Hellenes and to turn back the inexorable advance of the Galilean religion perished with him … Continue Reading »
You know, theres a porn store for Android … . You can download nothing but porn… . Your kids can download porn. Thats a place we dont want to go, so were not going to go there. Those are the now famous words of Steve Jobs, CEO of Apple … Continue Reading »
Recently, Kenneth Howell, an adjunct professor who worked for Newman Center at the University of Illinois in Champaign/Urbana, was told by his department chair that he could no longer teach there. His offense: explaining and clarifying the Catholic moral teaching on homosexuality while teaching a class on Catholicism. A couple of students complained to the department chair with the usual charge: his moral reasoning is hate speech that creates a hostile environment for gays and lesbians… . Continue Reading »
My home is a 45-minute drive from Gettysburg National Military Park, a site Ive visited many times, never without some emotion. The nature of that emotion crystallized for me a few years ago when I took some Australian friends on an audio tour of the battlefield with the help of Father Scott Newman, pastor of St. Marys Church in Greenville, S.C., who drove the other car in our small motorcade… . Continue Reading »