Via Julian , I see that Yglesias has spun a narrative : For the past 65-70 yearsand especially for the past 30 years since the end of the civil rights argumentAmerican politics has been dominated by controversy over the size and scope of the welfare state. Today, that argument is . . . . Continue Reading »
Over at Cato, Julian Sanchez has written a post about how the aftermath of healthcare reform could reveal faultlines in existing political coalitions and trigger realignment: Theres no intrinsic commonality between, say, left positions on taxation, foreign policy, and reproductive . . . . Continue Reading »
More litigation against Obamacare: Apparently the law expanded Medicaid—which is paid in part by the states. They don’t have the money and some are suing. From the story:President Barack Obama faces a fight over the health-care overhaul from states that sued today because the . . . . Continue Reading »
From the National Catholic Register (not to be confused with the National Catholic Reporter , which is not nearly so fond of the pope and the Catechism as the Register ) comes the link to a series of panoramic views of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. It was produced by a Turkish . . . . Continue Reading »
I heard this song recently: “Why” by Nichole Nordeman. I love much of Nordeman’s music (the tone of her voice is just so fragile and honest) and the song certainly is moving. As I once heard songwriter Babyface Edmonds term it, it’s . . . . Continue Reading »
If Luther retained the ordinary of the mass, in 1526 he nevertheless created a metrical version, the Deutsche Messe, which could be easily sung by ordinary congregations. This is similar to what motivated the non-Lutheran reformers to versify the Psalms. Here is the metrical credo, We All Believe in . . . . Continue Reading »
Leon Kass is one of the great thinkers in bioethics (and a friend), a man of great eloquence whose rare depth of thought and knowledge sometimes makes my jaw drop.In honor of his many years of contribution to bioethical discourse and his many services to society, the Center for Bioethics and Culture . . . . Continue Reading »
The distinctive look of an Early American church is unmistakable. It might be Bostons Old North Church or Kings Chapel or, as visitors to Manhattans Financial District may find, New Yorks John Street Church. John Streets congregation, the oldest Methodist congregation . . . . Continue Reading »
1. The thought Locke=Nature and Darwin=History described above is almost completely backwards. Locke=Freedom From Nature (and implicitly history) and Darwin=Nature is much closer to the truth. That’s why Darwinian Larry can use Darwin, with some initial plausibility, to oppose History (by . . . . Continue Reading »