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Learning FROM Literature

Before we move too far beyond the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, I thought I’d post one more thought about the subject. After I’d had my moment when babies became real (see my last post), I had an overlapping experience that greatly shaped my understanding of literature.While I teach . . . . Continue Reading »

The Most Popular Unknown Novelist in America?

The New York Times has a profile of one of the world’s most sucessful novelists. Can you guess who it might be? And no, it’s not Stephen King, John Grisham, or Dan Brown (over the last few years he has sold more books than all of them combined ). Here are some other clues: Since 2006, . . . . Continue Reading »

Draft Paul Volcker as Fed Chairman!

I posted this proposal at the “Inner Workings” blog but believe the issue is important enough to reiterate here:Today’s lead Bloomberg News report that the French banks were willing to accept a haircut on their AIG swaps suggests that the New York Fed lied about the . . . . Continue Reading »

The Savior State

The functions of the family and church, says Douglas Farrow, are being replaced by the state : When I speak of the audacity of the state, the kind of state I have in mind is what we may call the savior state. The main characteristic of the savior state is that it presents itself as the . . . . Continue Reading »

Mugged by Ultrasound

David Daleiden and Jon A. Shields on why so many abortion workers have turned pro-life : In the aftermath of Roe v. Wade, second-trimester abortions were usually performed by saline injection. The doctor simply replaced the amniotic fluid in the patient’s uterus with a saline solution and . . . . Continue Reading »

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