Go hug your favorite grammarianit’s officially National Grammar Day . Language is something to be celebrated, and March 4 is the perfect day to do it. It’s not only a date, it’s an imperative: March forth on March 4 to speak well, write well, and help others do the same! . . . . Continue Reading »
Stephen Barr on science, reason, and Catholic faith : There is hardly any subject about which there is more widespread ignorance and misinformation than the relationship between the Catholic faith and science. This ignorance extends to all sectors of society, from the man on the street . . . . Continue Reading »
About a month ago, I did an extended interview with Colleen Carroll Campbell for EWTN about my book. It will air in a few months. But what a nice surprise today that she devoted her column to a review. And she gets it. From her column:Wesley J. Smith is a speciesist. And he thinks . . . . Continue Reading »
I am sympathetic to the motivation of those who argue that each of us should be presumed by law to want to be an organ donor—increasing the organ supply—but not the method. Known as “presumed consent,” these laws assume silence means consent, making each of us potential . . . . Continue Reading »
There are so many gems of wisdom in William Deresiewiczs lecture on ” Solitude and Leadership “delivered to a plebe class at West Pointthat its difficult to find a single point to excerpt. But his section on introspection and solitude is especially insightful and . . . . Continue Reading »
Two Muslim women defy the (appropriately named) Rapiscan . . . while the other cowards in the British police state continue their cowardly ways: The two women are thought to be the first passengers to refuse to submit to scanning by the machines, which have provoked controversy among human rights . . . . Continue Reading »
Charles Rice, a professor emeritus at Notre Dame Law School, writes a regular column that appears in the Notre Dame student newspaper, The Observer . Recently, Rice submitted a column on the Catholic Church’s teaching regarding homosexuality that was rejected by the papers new editor . . . . Continue Reading »
I meet people occasionally who think motion pictures, the product Hollywood makes, is merely entertainment, has nothing to do with education. That’s one of the darndest fool fantasies that is current . . . . Anything that brings you to tears by way of drama does something to the deepest roots . . . . Continue Reading »
First Things junior fellow Kevin Staley-Joyce examines how JFK secularized the Catholic conscience : Perhaps the most cognitively dissonant trend that Kennedy set in motion was his self-styled dualism, a vice of mind now ubiquitous among Catholic politicians. The personalprivate gap can . . . . Continue Reading »