As the Christmas season has come to a close, here, for your reading pleasure and reflection, is Michael Novak’s lovely Christmas verse for his late wife, Karen Laub-Novak : ON CHRISTMAS, FOR KAREN December 25, 2009 Full of grace! Full of grace. Full of grace . . . ! Mother, who . . . . Continue Reading »
Have you ever seen such a botched and corrupt process? Rather than focus reform on what needs fixing—access to insurance for the hard to cover—President Obama and his Congressional court jesters tried to remake the entire health care system. But the bill was based on expediency . . . . Continue Reading »
I double-checked the date and this New York Times story was indeed written yesterday, and not in 1961: A suburban Dallas school district has suspended a 4-year-old from his prekindergarten class because he wears his hair too long and does not want his parents to cut it. The boy, Taylor Pugh, says . . . . Continue Reading »
“Jews are a famously accomplished group,” says David Brooks , opening his column with an understatement. When the successes of the Jewish people are listed, it never fails to impress. Consider some of the examples Brooks gives: They make up 0.2 percent of the world population, but 54 . . . . Continue Reading »
Whenever Jason Byassee writes a guest editorial for Theology Today, don’t miss it. In the latest issue he describes his experience with young ministers:Another sign of hope is the posture of these young ministers toward institutions. Many of my former seminary classmates left the ministry . . . . Continue Reading »
Investor’s Business Daily opines that Proposition 71 has been a failure. From its editorial:California’s Proposition 71 was intended to create a $3 billion West Coast counterpart to the National Institutes of Health, empowered to go where the NIH could not either because of . . . . Continue Reading »
“Looking back, I wish I had never played during the steroid era,” says Mark McGwire, admitting at last what everyone already knewthat he drugged himself silly in the era of his greatest success in baseball. Over at the Washington Post , Tracee Hamilton has the right response : The . . . . Continue Reading »
The latest report from the Red Cross is that the devastating earthquake in Haiti has left an estimated 3 million people in need of emergency aid. The aid organization says Haiti’s disaster relief teams were “completely overwhelmed.” If you would like to help, the American Red . . . . Continue Reading »
I have an article on the modern university in the upcoming Fall 2009/Winter 2010 issue of The New Atlantis which also includes a piece by our own Peter Lawler. Below is a short excerpt: This tension can also be seen in the description Jefferson gives of the natural moral . . . . Continue Reading »
Ok, so I rarely post over here. Sorry. But I figure the least I can do is cross-post once in awhile from my “real” blog. So here goes.*****Let me start with the caveats. Many people suffer at the hands of others. The world can be unfair, at times mercilessly so. Millions of people in the . . . . Continue Reading »