This YouTube is very worth watching. And please note that were this man suicidal rather than empowered, the assisted suicide movement would gladly give him the pills and call it compassionate. Let us be attentive!HT: Bobby . . . . Continue Reading »
I want to thank Wheaton College , out here in Illinois, for inviting me to give this year’s commencement address. I recognize that, as a practicing Catholic, I was a difficult choice for the school to makesince Wheaton College is, after all, the school so well featured in the movie . . . . Continue Reading »
In response to the Rhetoric Society of Americas inquiry what are Pope Benedicts reasons for positioning the Catholic Church as an essential link between enterprise and justice, and as a significant voice in the public discussion of globalization I suggest a spiritual . . . . Continue Reading »
Massachusetts’ experiment with a form of Obamacare is failing, with the state’s insurance companies in terrible financial trouble because of the heavy hand of politicized premium regulation. From the story:The four major Massachusetts health insurers yesterday posted first-quarter losses . . . . Continue Reading »
Barack Hussein Obubble: the moniker fits, now that the grand Keynesian scheme of refloating the world economy on a tide of government debt has come undone. Global stock markets fell 3 percent to 4 percent overnight because American incompetence and American weakness have combined to make the world . . . . Continue Reading »
His report card indicates hes a pleasure to have in class, but ninth-grader Jason Laguna was recently suspended from his high school in Haverstraw, New York for insubordination and endangering the safety, health, morals or welfare of himself or others. His offense? A . . . . Continue Reading »
In Storm Clouds in Ukraine , today’s “On the Square” article, George Weigel warns of what he calls “an exercise in hardball politics under the veil of public piety that was, in fact, a harbinger of danger for religious freedom, for Ukrainian democracy, and for the future of . . . . Continue Reading »
I dedicated over a half a decade to watching one of the most ambitious and ambiguous serial narratives in modern times. I became emotionally invested in the moral lives of the characters. I waited through a painfully long hiatus to find out how the seriesone of the great works of pop . . . . Continue Reading »
A friend sends along a link to a New York Times article about naming : “Giving one’s offspring odd, random or deliberately misspelled names is a form of mistreatment that also hurts the rest of society.” Remembering his fascination with American naming habits , she adds, “I . . . . Continue Reading »