Crunchy Con

August 2006 Archives

Thursday August 31, 2006

War on the Middle Class

John Derbyshire today, from his August diary:

We’re hearing a lot about this — Lou Dobbs runs a regular segment on it. I think the real war is on the working class, who are being priced out of jobs by floods of illegal immigrants. Of course, nobody much cares. In a modern meritocracy, all the articulate members of the working class — the kind of people who might organize, agitate, and make trouble — are siphoned off into colleges and law schools at an early age, to become members of the elite, agitating for elite interests. Those left behind can eat cake, or welfare — that seems to be the general attitude, certainly the elite attitude.

The lower-middle and middle classes really do seem to be hurting, though. I mean, I live among such people, and I hear about it. I don’t care how many feelgood pieces Larry Kudlow posts on NRO, telling us how wonderfully well the economy is doing. It may be doing fine by Larry over there on his gated private estate, but I’ve never heard so much grumbling down here on Main Street.

The following is not an original observation, but it’s one worth repeating: Much of the talk we hear from economists and government financial panjandrums nowadays treats the national economy as a thing in itself, to be egged on and expanded and caressed and cherished, without any concern for the actual citizens of this country. Sure, I’d rather live in a rich country than a poor one, and a healthy economy is a jolly good thing; but “expanding” is not necessarily synonymous with “healthy,” not for economies any more than for waistlines. A swelling economy is not ipso facto a good thing. It might lift all boats; or it might just lift a few and swamp the rest. It depends how things are organized. As Oliver Goldsmith noted: "Ill fares the land, to hast’ning ills a prey,Where wealth accumulates, and men decay." That’s about where we’re at, it seems to me. And no, it’s not a leftist remark; Goldsmith was a Tory.


Front page news here in Dallas yesterday: wages in north Texas are declining. Economists blame it on an influx of low-wage immigrant workers. How legal do you think they are? Yesterday I had a long conversation with a middle-class homeowner who recently left the Dallas area for up north. He said that he lived in a decent middle-class neighborhood north of the city. Ethnically mixed, which was fine by him, because everybody took care of their properties, and got alone fine. About five years ago, there began to be an influx of Latino immigrants. They started running businesses out of their rental houses. Almost overnight, there were cars parked all along the street, even in yards, which were piling up with junk. He assumes they were illegal, but can't prove it, and it wouldn't matter if he could, he said, because nobody in the city was going to do anything about it. Not even code enforcement.

He said he and his wife sold their house at a loss, just to keep from losing more money. They could see where the neighborhood was headed. He's a conservative Republican, but says he's sick of the multiculti left and the open-borders, big-business right. Nobody is speaking up for people like him, he said, and the media is bound and determined to portray them as racist. He said the issue never was having Hispanic neighbors, which is fine by him. The issue was having lawbreakers move in who had no respect for the traditions and practices of the neighborhood. And nobody in Washington or anywhere else giving a damn.

Interestingly, I also had a conversation with a very, VERY liberal activist reader here in Dallas yesterday. She lives in a mixed neighborhood not far from my own. She said she's sick of seeing all the illegals piling into her neighborhood, and of the idea that if you want to speak critically about it, you are automatically suspected of harboring racist bigotry. This is a woman who has not been shy in letting me know over the past few years that she thinks I'd make a good Tonto for Attila the Hun. But she's had enough.

I dunno, maybe Caleb Stegall is ahead of his time.

Thursday August 31, 2006

Proverbs

When's the last time you read the book of Proverbs? Me, probably not since I was a kid. But at Matthew's school, they have a reading schedule from the Bible at night. Parents reading to their kids. They're first graders, so every night, a chapter of Proverbs.

Can I just tell you that the Proverbs writer needed an editor. This is what Proverbs is like:

The wise man speaks pleasantly about his neighbors,
But the fool slanders them without remorse.

OK, fine. But three verses down:
Pleasant words about the neighbors issue forth from the mouth of the wise,
But the fool is good for nothing but slander.

And you're thinking, hmm. And then you come across:
The neighbors? If you're smart, your lips will drip honey about them;
But if you're a dumb guy, not so much.

On and on like this. Somebody was padding this thing out. I'm a writer, I know that trick. I'm just sayin'.

Thursday August 31, 2006

I love this Pope

Pope Benedict has cancelled the Vatican's Christmas pop concert.

“Pope Ratzinger prefers Mozart and Bach to 'pop' music and thus, after 12 years, the traditional Vatican Christmas concert comes to an end,” the daily La Stampa said.

“It is impossible not to notice a change under the new pontiff,” the ANSA news agency said.

“Benedict XVI is a very sober pope and is not inclined toward variety shows. He is more concerned about leading the faith of Catholics to its spiritual essence.”


Ahhh...

Thursday August 31, 2006

Free marketers vs. Christians

A reader sends this link to an interesting post on the Half Sigma blog, about demographics and party realignment. Money graf:

The Republican Party is a coalition between Christians and people with libertarian economic views. Political pundits are so used to this that they think it’s natural for these two philosophies to go together. In fact the opposite is true; more libertarian people are less religious. As more Christian voters with socialist economic views join the Republican party, candidates who support libertarian economic policies will no longer win primaries, and suddenly the platforms of the two parties will undergo a radical shift. The Republican Party will become the party of religious socialists, and the Democratic Party will be the party of secular libertarians. The good news is that this will result in the leftist wing being kicked out of the Democratic Party. The bad news is that the Republican Party will probably command more votes than the Democratic Party and we will see the country become more socialist, and at the same time abortion will be outlawed, prayer re-introduced to the public schools, etc.

This is the future and it is inevitable.


Well, there is a point there, obscured though it may be by the scare-word "socialist." It would be helpful to know what the author means by "socialist." I don't know many Christians who'd qualify under a commonsense definition, but if by "socialist" he means people who believe that the government has a duty, broadly speaking, to make sure that the inequalities in society don't become too great, and that there's a social safety net, then yes, Christians are generally "socialist."

I doubt there will be the kind of realignment he predicts, mostly because Christians who vote Republican either have no problem with free-market economics as the GOP's libertarians preach it, or they swallow their concerns because issues like abortion, gay marriage, religious liberty, affirmative action and so forth mean more to them than economics. (Don't ask whether or not the GOP will actually do much of anything about those social issues once they're in power; the social conservatives provide a big chunk of the votes, but the business conservatives tend to get the payoff.) Similarly, the Democrats could be making big gains this fall if they'd go all big-tent on social issues. They won't, because their social issues define them.

The only likely thing that could really realign the parties would be a major economic crisis, I think -- something that made economic policy the driving force in US politics. Absent that, I think we're going to have the status quo for some time, with changes around the margins.

UPDATE: Ross Douthat observes "the fundamental problem with the whole post-McGovern Democratic strategy, which has been to build a coalition of upper-middle-class professionals, the poor and minority groups, and enough working and middle-class voters to push them over the top (see The Emerging Democratic Majority). It could work, and indeed it almost has at times—but it’s being persistently sabotaged by the fact that a large and growing chunk of its smart, wealthy, well-educated base just can’t stand religion, and simply won’t let their political party get right with God, or at least the voters who believe in him. As Sullivan says, “[T]hese Democrats view the party’s interest in talking to religious voters as a sure betrayal of the party’s principles.” And they have enough money, megaphones, and high-speed Internet connections to make sure that America knows it."

Thursday August 31, 2006

Bob Schieffer, class act

The avuncular Bob Schieffer just signed off as anchor for the CBS Evening News, handing the reins to Katie Couric. Boy oh boy, what a class act he is. I'm going to miss him. My desktop TV only gets one cable news channel (CNN) and one network broadcast channel (CBS), so I've been stuck with Bob for the duration. It was a total pleasure. Now I've got Katie on my screen for the duration. Not so happy about that.

Thursday August 31, 2006

And now, the President's speech

I re-read Rumsfeld's American Legion speech this morning, and it's just horrible, an embarrassment, for all the reasons Fred Kaplan says. I said it was a "disgrace" yesterday, and I mean just that. The very idea that the Secretary of...

Thursday August 31, 2006

"And the greatest of these is love."

Here's a wonderful story about a Christian couple who left their home in Oregon and relocated with their kids to New Orleans after Katrina to be there to minister to the broken and broken-hearted. Jim Louviere and his wife Michele...

Thursday August 31, 2006

All Things Crunchy

FYI, for your listening pleasure, I'll be giving a commentary on NPR's "All Things Considered" later this afternoon. I recorded it just now, and it will air sometime today, don't know exactly when. I waxed philosophical about what it's like...

Wednesday August 30, 2006

Wiki me, baby

The good news, I guess, is that somebody has finally set up a Wikipedia page for Your Working Boy. The bad news is that it's factually incorrect. I'm not from Baton Rouge, but St. Francisville. I'm Gumby, dammit!...

Wednesday August 30, 2006

The Joy of Pessimism

Over at Eunomia, Daniel Larison has a series of blogs on the subject of pessimism that made cheerfully gloomy me, um, happy. Like this quote:Instead of blaming pessimism, perhaps we can learn from it. Rather than hiding from the ugliness...

Wednesday August 30, 2006

A disgraceful speech

Defense Secretary Rumsfeld gave a speech to the American Legion yesterday that I found simply disgraceful. I don't think the word is too strong, and here's why.Here's part of the speech:We need to face the following questions:+ With the growing...

Tuesday August 29, 2006

Spengler readers debate Qutb

At the Asia Times Online site, the estimable Spengler has launched a discussion thread about my piece discussing why the Islamist ideologist Sayyid Qutb -- hanged 40 years ago today in Cairo -- is so important to the war we...

Tuesday August 29, 2006

The Sahara of the Bozart

In Frisco, a booming northern suburb of Dallas, a fifth-grade public school art teacher has been suspended from her job. Why? For taking her students on a field trip to the Dallas Museum of Art. There they were reportedly exposed...

Tuesday August 29, 2006

+Rowan on homosexuality

There's been a kerfuffle in recent days over alleged comments made by Rowan Williams, the Archbishop of Canterbury, in which he is said to have told a Dutch interviewer that homosexuals would have to change to get right with the...

Tuesday August 29, 2006

The new childless

A few years ago, when Matthew was a baby, the three of us went to Rome. Had a great time. The Italians made a fuss everywhere about Matthew, who was two and a half at the time. It was pretty...

Tuesday August 29, 2006

The loyalty of the religious right

Though the Pew Center poll finds growing dissatisfaction (dillusionment?) of the Religious Right with the GOP, Jeremy Lott and Patrick Hynes say that religious conservatives are not likely to abandon the Republican Party:The Democratic party elites cheer when regulators force...

Tuesday August 29, 2006

Karr, Jeffs

Well, that was fun. Not. John Mark Karr is not only a hairless sociopathic perv, but a big fat liar, as many people suspected even before Colorado taxpayers subsidized his first-class flight back home from Bangkok. But you know, I...

Tuesday August 29, 2006

Dems still losing among religious voters

Amy Sullivan, a leading light of the smart religious left, on the Democratic Party's continuing travails in reaching out to voters of faith....

Tuesday August 29, 2006

Claire Messud's novel

I'm not much for fiction, but I really want to read Claire Messud's "The Emperor's Children." Reading the Slate review brought to mind Donna Tartt's "The Secret History," which came out like, forever ago (1992, to be precise). I loved...

Monday August 28, 2006

Wearing liturgical orange

Here's news that the Sonoma County District Attorney might well have enough evidence to charge Santa Rose Bishop Daniel Walsh with a crime in connection with the escape to Mexico of a priest wanted for child molestation. Bishop Walsh might...

Monday August 28, 2006

Sex ed in America

Also over le weekend, I read this NYT Book Review essay evaluating a new history of school-based sex education since the 1960s. Reviewer Judith Shulevitz says that the message of Kristen Luker's book is: the research shows that it doesn't...

Monday August 28, 2006

Sayyid Qutb's purpose-driven life

In yesterday's Dallas Morning News, I published an essay about why we should all be paying attention to the legacy of Sayyid Qutb, the philosopher of Islamic terrorism. (Dr. Billy Abraham, a theologian at SMU, wrote a companion piece about...

Monday August 28, 2006

Our Republican administration [see update]

Today HUD Secretary Alfonso Jackson announced that the federal government would spend ALMOST TWO BILLION DOLLARS to -- wait for it -- rebuild housing projects in New Orleans.That's right, the taxpayers are going to spend NEARLY TWO BILLION DOLLARS to...

Monday August 28, 2006

Le weekend

It rained this weekend here in Dallas. Which was momentous for us, not only because we're bone-dry here, but because it broke the 19-day streak of temps over 100 degrees. I hate summer. Hate. It. Winter can't get here fast...

Monday August 28, 2006

The Georgetown ban

Georgetown University, a Jesuit school pretending to be a Catholic one, has kicked six Evangelical student groups off campus. I'm hearing that the problem is the Evangelical students didn't want to kowtow to the official Protestant ministers appointed by the...

Monday August 28, 2006

Charlotte Allen on Plan B

Charlotte Allen delivers a blistering attack on the White House for rolling over on the "morning after" abortion pill (and yes, if you believe -- as most pro-lifers do -- that life in a moral sense begins at conception, medication...

Friday August 25, 2006

The sight of brains falling out

The Episcopalians at Washington's National Cathedral are so open-minded that their brains have fallen out. That's the only conclusion I can draw from the fact that those squirrelly libs are hosting Mohammed Khatami, the former president of Iran, who will...

Friday August 25, 2006

Scenes from a testosterhome

This morning. Late for school. Me in the bathroom with a two-year-old and a six-year-old."Da-a-a-d, Babboo's got my nose!""Lucas, look in the mirror. Your brother doesn't have your nose.""BABBOO'S GOT MY NOSE!!""Here, I'll put it on your head.""Matthew, look --""BABBOO...

Friday August 25, 2006

Plan B and Mattingly's Law

As far as I'm concerned, Victor Morton nails the meaning of the government's decision to allow over-the-counter sales of Plan B -- the "morning after pill" -- to women 18 and over. Victor writes:Let me see if I've got this...

Friday August 25, 2006

Pew: Religion, politics shaking up

We're as giddy as a schoolgirl today, because the Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, one of our favorite organizations, is out with new poll results on American attitudes toward religion and politics. For Your Working Boy, this is...

Friday August 25, 2006

Love and Dope

Our combox pal Michael Blowhard makes a great find from the celebrated art critic Robert Hughes (whose book "Barcelona" is one of my favorites), writing here about the damage the Sixties -- his Sixties -- did to him and his...

Thursday August 24, 2006

Victory Gardens

JohnT keeps up his excellent crunchy-Catholic blogging, this time advocating reviving a World War II tradition: the Victory Garden. Instead of getting all Henny-Penny about how the sky is falling -- even if it really does sorta look like it...

Thursday August 24, 2006

Stem-cell sore winners

Unless I'm missing something, today's news about the new technique to harvest embryonic stem cells for research -- a method that doesn't require killing the embryo -- is wonderful. Imagine that -- a way to do ESCR that doesn't exterminate...

Thursday August 24, 2006

Don't marry career women

That's the advice Forbes.com's Michael Noer gives to men in a controversial web column (published here, along with an unconvincing rebuttal by a female colleague who found his piece "frightening.") Noer cites a number of social-science studies finding that two-career...

Thursday August 24, 2006

The debate is over. What next?

Pour yourself a stiff drink and read this assessment from the WaPo by Daniel Byman and Ken Pollack. Here's the lede:The debate is over: By any definition, Iraq is in a state of civil war. Indeed, the only thing standing...

Wednesday August 23, 2006

Was Andy Young right?

Steve Sailer says that like it or not, Andrew Young had a point when he said that blacks are better off with Wal-Mart driving mom-and-pop stores in their neighborhoods out of business. Aside from getting lower prices, blacks stand for...

Wednesday August 23, 2006

That's not Jesus

...that's Iggy Pop!...

Wednesday August 23, 2006

Osama? Who he?

"I'm not sure finding Osama bin Laden is really that important." So said Maj. Gen. Gerald Minetti, director of Coalition Coordination for US Centcom, at MacDill AFB in Florida, in an editorial board meeting here at the newspaper today. Well,...

Wednesday August 23, 2006

"It's all a Protestant Crusade!"

Finally, somebody's blaming the Lutherans for being Crusaders. Lake Wobegon my foot! You Lutherans are sneaky!...

Wednesday August 23, 2006

The guilt of the silent

Via Amy comes this must-read National Catholic Reporter essay by Diane Pawlowski criticizing Catholic laypeople who remained, and do remain, silent in the face of clerical sexual abuse. Excerpt:Sexual abuse by priests could not continue for decades without the active...

Tuesday August 22, 2006

Um...no, actually, it wasn't

Over at the Corner, Mario Loyola has a post up titled "Remembering Why We Prayed for a Bush Victory." The reason, according to Mario? Bush's refusal to back down from his Iraq strategy. Here's Mario:[R]ecall the presidents this country has...

Tuesday August 22, 2006

The trap of "Romantic Orthodoxy"

In a journal entry from Nov. 1, 1980, Father Alexander Schmemann, the renowned Orthodox priest, discerned a problem with what he called "Romantic Orthodoxy," which can be distinguished by the following characteristics:+ nominalism (e.g., non-existing Patriarchates)+ blind liturgical conservatism+ cult...

Tuesday August 22, 2006

Thin skins

OK, I'm going to rant for a bit. We have a long and lively thread going below in which people are arguing about evangelizing. For Christians, evangelizing is a commandment of Christ's. I'm not the sort of person who is...

Tuesday August 22, 2006

The soul of the university

Tom Hibbs, the Catholic philosopher who heads the Honors College at Baylor, writes that American universities have lost their way by becoming indifferent to the way classical liberal education is supposed to form the character of undergraduates. Instead, we have...

Tuesday August 22, 2006

So much for that

President Bush has approved the Plan B abortion pill for sale to adults without a prescription, and to minors with a prescription. See, this is why so many of us pro-life social conservatives prayed for a Bush victory: so he...

Tuesday August 22, 2006

Point of no return

Thomas Sowell's column today says "We are fast approaching the point of no return," and rubs our noses in it. Excerpt:It is hard to think of a time when a nation -- and a whole civilization -- has drifted more...

Tuesday August 22, 2006

Liberalism and elitism

E.J. Dionne's column today explores why liberalism became a nasty word, and why, in the minds of many Americans, liberals became synonymous with cultural elitism. E.J. says that the late Richard Hofstadter had a lot of useful insights in explaining...

Tuesday August 22, 2006

Insta-Crunchy

"Real Food" author Nina Planck and I are guests on the latest podcast from Instapundit Glenn Reynolds and his Insta-wife Helen Smith. Download it here. Behold my irritating nasally voice!...

Monday August 21, 2006

But are they flame-retardant at the stake?

This cringeworthy Christian child's pajama wear is enough to make you take up Tibetan Buddhism. Or alcoholism. As cheesy Jesus junk goes, this is uncut Velveeta.Still, there's a telling point here. That's the kind of nerdly, Rod-and-Todd garments fundamentalist Christians...

Monday August 21, 2006

Attitude and platitudes

"The American people have got to understand the consequence (sic) of leaving Iraq before the job is done," President Bush said today, explaining that he has no intention of changing course in Iraq.But what does that mean? What benchmarks will...

Sunday August 20, 2006

Spengler advises the pope

By the way, Spengler has a humorous advice column. In his latest installment, "Pope Benedict" -- whom Spengler, when he's not writing tongue in cheek, admires very much -- has written him wanting to know why so many American Evangelicals...

Sunday August 20, 2006

A great food blog

Stuart Buck, who is not a food blogger but a law blogger (mostly, and a lively one -- check out his thoroughgoing diss of Judge Anna Diggs Taylor's ruling on the NSA warrantless wiretapping program), writes to direct me to...

Sunday August 20, 2006

Eating well, cheaply

Over on The Immaculate Direction, his excellent blog about raising a family in the sacramental tradition, JohnT, a frequent commenter on the CC blog, shows a photograph of the meal his family of four had today for dinner. They ate...

Sunday August 20, 2006

A difficult question

Joshua Trevino has written a provocative essay that will unsettle everyone who reads it. He is forcing us to look at a question that is not in our nature, at least not in the West, to consider. Trevino writes in...

Sunday August 20, 2006

Crunchy-Con meet-ups

We'd talked a bit here before about organizing meet-ups in various places for readers of "Crunchy Cons" and those interested in the ideas presented in the book. I just got a nice e-mail from a Dallas reader who wanted to...

Saturday August 19, 2006

Valladares vs. the Cuban bishops

Armando Valladares, the heroic Cuban Catholic poet and former political prisoner, writes in condemnation of Cuba's Catholic bishops for being apologists and suck-ups to the evil anti-Christian Castro regime....

Saturday August 19, 2006

Un-freaking-believable

This government of ours, I swear. They've gone and given officials from CAIR a behind-the-scenes tour of airline security, to show them that security procedures are not anti-Muslim.Read that again. That's right, CAIR. The mind boggles. How completely stupid are...

Saturday August 19, 2006

Ross on crunchy-con elitism

Ross Douthat identifies what I think is the biggest problem with the crunchy-con sensibility: the difficulty of reconciling its ideals with practical concerns of ordinary people. He starts by talking about how it sounds great to come out in favor...

Friday August 18, 2006

Wal-Mart and the Democrats

So, the Democrats are now taking out after Wal-Mart. From Reuters:Critics paint Wal-Mart as a national symbol of corporate irresponsibility, claiming it provides inadequate wages and health care coverage for its 1.3 million employees while shipping new jobs overseas."The Wal-Mart...

Friday August 18, 2006

Imagining "freedom"

Over at Hugh Hewitt's blog, Dean Barnett looks into the abyss, and says that it's clear now that by the time this war with radical Islam is over, a hell of a lot of people will have had to die,...

Friday August 18, 2006

Death of a missionary

Lynette Hoppe, an American who has lived in dirt-poor Albania as a missionary with her husband Nathan and their two kids for the past seven years, is on her deathbed this afternoon, suffering from cancer. The Hoppe family went to...

Friday August 18, 2006

August and everything after

Rick Hertzberg, who writes the lead Talk of the Town piece in the New Yorker every week, is as predictable a liberal as you can hope to find. He's a good writer but an unsurprising thinker, so I usually check...

Friday August 18, 2006

Andrew Young, bigot of the day

It was bad enough that Andrew Young sold his credibility to Wal-Mart as a way to convince people that Wal-Mart is a fine, upstanding corporate citizen. But to play to rancid racial stereotypes to make it look like Wal-Mart is...

Thursday August 17, 2006

That'll show 'em

As anybody with a lick of sense could see coming, Hezbollah's victory in the war with Israel is opening the way for it to become the de facto government of Lebanon. The terrorists are going around the country with $150...

Thursday August 17, 2006

JonBenet

When's the last time you thought about JonBenet Ramsey? Me, not for years. It was a shock to hear her name again yesterday when that skin-crawlingly creepy John Mark Karr was arrested in -- of course -- Bangkok. Despite his...

Thursday August 17, 2006

Islam doesn't laugh

Fantastic essay by Roger Scruton in today's Wall Street Journal -- alas, it's not available online. In it, the English philosopher says that the problem with Islam is that it has no sense of irony, as shown by the extremely...

Thursday August 17, 2006

1974, all over again?

David Broder talks to Republican bigs who are afraid that this fall could be a replay of the 1974 midterms, in which disgust with Watergate led the Dems to a massive Congressional sweep. Well, news like this is not helping:...

Wednesday August 16, 2006

Sanity, at last

The British government is discussing with airport operators plans to give extra screening to Muslim passengers. Good. From the story:The passenger-profiling technique involves selecting people who are behaving suspiciously, have an unusual travel pattern or, most controversially, have a certain...

Wednesday August 16, 2006

Look who's saying it

National Review editor Rich Lowry whispers sotto voce that Bush might have led us all into another Vietnam. This is not, of course, a fresh observation. What's new -- and significant -- is who's saying it. Tom Friedman's column today...

Wednesday August 16, 2006

Israelis turn on their government

Israelis are furious at their government -- rightly so -- for bungling the Hezbollah war and thereby making their nation less secure. Well, see, that's how they do things in Israel. Here in America, we pay lip service to accountability,...

Wednesday August 16, 2006

Duh.

Here's some confidence-building news. Today's NYT reports that President Bush is distressed by the lack of public support in Iraq for US goals and policy. This from the report on a private lunch Mr. Bush had yesterday with experts:More generally,...

Wednesday August 16, 2006

Defeated, not courted

Over on The Corner, Andy McCarthy and my friend John Podhoretz have been fighting over democracy, terrorism and Islam. I really do think Andy slam-dunks it in this posting, in which he says those (like President Bush) who insist that...

Wednesday August 16, 2006

4949 Swiss Avenue

If you have some time, sit down and read this amazing series of stories from The Dallas Morning News concerning a faded, Norma Desmond-ish Southern belle and the fate of her decaying mansion. A pair of grifters ingratiated themselves with...

Tuesday August 15, 2006

The moment on the bridge

Bear with me, this is long, but I saw "World Trade Center" last week, and I want to say something.A superstitious Catholic legend holds that on a day close to the End, every man, woman and child alive will be...

Tuesday August 15, 2006

I'm here, I'm here!

Thanks you guys for e-mailing to see if everything was okay, given that I didn't blog yesterday. All is well. I was just extremely busy, and had to write an Ariel Sharon obituary editorial in case he died suddenly, as...

Tuesday August 15, 2006

I know, I know

I didn't post a thing yesterday. Sorry, I was swamped. I'll make up for it today. I dunno, maybe that's a threat....

Tuesday August 15, 2006

A heretical thought

George Will's column today ends with a brutal punch to the administration's jaw:Foreign policy "realists" considered Middle East stability the goal. The realists' critics, who regard realism as reprehensibly unambitious, considered stability the problem. That problem has been solved.In his...

Saturday August 12, 2006

Why disclose this?!

White House spokesman Tony Snow told the world that President Bush read Albert Camus' famous novel "The Stranger" on his current vacation. Maybe I'm oversensitive, but that's a really stupid thing to disclose, from a p.r. point of view. The...

Saturday August 12, 2006

Mel Gibson, Flannery O'Connor and me

My Melled-out reflections from today's Dallas Morning News about the lessons of fallen humanity and the power of grace I learned from reading Flannery O'Connor and living in a small Southern town....

Saturday August 12, 2006

The impotence of liberal religion

From this NYT story today about the British terror suspects, a telling quote about one of them, Ibrahim Savant, who was born Oliver but converted to Islam:“My cousin, who went with Ibrahim to the same class, said that he converted,...

Friday August 11, 2006

"Terribly sick within the Muslim mind"

Andrew Sullivan is catching grief from a Muslim reader for having written a single sentence suggesting that there's something really messed up in the collective Muslim mind now, re: all this terrorism. If it makes Andrew feel any better, this...

Friday August 11, 2006

Onward and upward in conservative punditry

A friend writes:Tucker Carlson really should have stayed at the Weekly Standard....

Friday August 11, 2006

Hmmm.

A Dallas businessman writes with a query:You may have noticed that the DHS has been broadcasting PSAs urging families to have disaster plans like those that they advocate for home fires, etc.--assigning a place to meet, carrying cell phones, etc....

Friday August 11, 2006

Gerard Baker talks sense

Here's Gerard Baker writing in the Times of London, about yesterday's events:Events such as yesterday’s near-miss should remind us that September 11, 2001, gave birth to a radical and dangerous new world. It required the US — an imperfect country...

Friday August 11, 2006

Chat with the Autorantic Virtual Moonbat

A friend e-mails this charming link to an insane left-wing robot who hates you, but wants to talk. Type in your line, and it gives you a 100 percent guaranteed Grade A Moonbat response. Here's an example:Me: "Islamic extremists make...

Friday August 11, 2006

Bush Presidential Library to SMU?

Here in Texas, there's been a three-way competition for the Bush Presidential Library site between Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Baylor University in Waco, and the (private, Catholic) University of Dallas in suburban Irving. The real competition has been between...

Thursday August 10, 2006

What people think

Amy Welborn speaks to what's on the minds of a lot of us, Catholics and otherwise, about the state of our civil and religious leadership amid all this terrorism and rumors of terrorism. She's specifically critical of the Pope's recent...

Thursday August 10, 2006

The price of un-vigilance

Via The Corner, here's a key point from a Lorenzo Vidino essay on the risk Western societies run by trying to fight against violent Islamic extremism according to the pieties and platitudes of multiculturalism:The Muslim Brotherhood's ample funds and organization...

Thursday August 10, 2006

For once, for once

Just out from CAIR:U.S. MUSLIMS TO REACT TO ALLEGED AIRLINE TERROR PLOT (WASHINGTON, DC, 8/10/06) - On Thursday, August 10, the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) will hold a noon news conference in Washington, D.C., to offer the Muslim community's...

Thursday August 10, 2006

The Dems' problem

The Lamont win was good for the Republicans, says Thomas Edsall in The New Republic Online (subscriber-only), because it shows that relatively well-off liberals drive the Dems' nominating process:There is nothing wrong with upscale liberals or downscale renters; a vote...

Wednesday August 9, 2006

What's the difference?

Lots of conservatives are lamenting the Lieberman loss. What I want to know is, why was it a good thing for our side to advocate the candidacy of Rep. Pat Toomey in his primary effort to unseat the semi-conservative Sen....

Wednesday August 9, 2006

Too much reality

About that David Warren column that Stanley Kurtz references, it's an extremely important one. What Warren does is highlight the way the American media, by declining (consciously or not) to report on the violent, Jew-hating insanity that ordinary Arabs take...

Wednesday August 9, 2006

Gloomy Hawks

With the exception of his take on the Iraq War, I'm pretty much where self-described "Gloomy Hawk" Stanley Kurtz is. You really need to read his essay, which in my view makes it painfully clear that there's no difference anymore...

Wednesday August 9, 2006

August 22nd, one mo' time

Yesterday, in the blog about whether or not Iran has something big and atomic planned for August 22, I wondered in this space how much we don't know about Iran's nuclear capabilities. Last night I read a story in the...

Tuesday August 8, 2006

TMatt talks to Caitlin

Love this excerpt from TMatt's interview with Caitlin Flanagan:In her book, she writes: "What few will admit -- because it is painful, because it reveals the unpleasant truth that life presents a series of choices, each of which precludes a...

Tuesday August 8, 2006

Lieberman agonistes

Whaddaya think about Lieberman's race? Me, I like Lieberman okay, and believe he's a thoroughly decent man. This Lamont sounds like a rich-guy airhead. But I have to admit I can't get all worked up over the prospect that Connecticut...

Tuesday August 8, 2006

Faith in institutions

I'm going to be in a training seminar till late afternoon, so light blogging for most of the day. I did want to say one thing, though.I'm nearly 40 years old, which makes me part of the generation that was...

Tuesday August 8, 2006

August 22 revisited

In today's Wall Street Journal (subscribers only edition), the eminent scholar of Islam Bernard Lewis warns the world to pay close attention to August 22. Excerpt:There is a radical difference between the Islamic Republic of Iran and other governments with...

Monday August 7, 2006

The real Ole Anthony?

There's an important cover story in last week's edition of the Dallas Observer, the alt-weekly here in Big D. It has to do with Ole Anthony, the director of the Trinity Foundation. If you know him at all, it's probably...

Monday August 7, 2006

On the other hand

The Muslim fundamentalists, alas, do have a point about the decadent West....

Monday August 7, 2006

Mr. Big Man

Just got to the office from the weekend to find the message light blinking. I punched in the code to see what it was all about. There was a creepy, sedated-sounding male voice on the other end, no doubt phoning...

Monday August 7, 2006

Media bias and anti-Semitism

Jeff Jacoby is no defender of Mel Gibson, but he wants to know how come it matters more to the media that a drunk Hollywood actor spouts off Jew-bashing garbage than it does when a Muslim shoots up a Jewish...

Monday August 7, 2006

Faithlessness = suicide

On TCS Daily, the scholar Frederick Turner has some anthropological thoughts about the decline and fall of civilizations:As a species whose major and unique specialization is language, we are meaning-seeking beings, and when the buck of meaning has been passed...

Monday August 7, 2006

Canary in the coal mine

Via Andrew Sullivan, this jaw-dropping op-ed by the respected left-liberal Norwegian literary figure Jostein Gaarder is a sign of what's to come for the Jews of Europe. Excerpts:We are now at the watershed. There is no turning back. The state...

Sunday August 6, 2006

August 22

Omar Fadhil from Iraq the Model writes in today's Philadelphia Inquirer that there are serious, substantive signs that Iranian leaders and their henchmen in Hezbollah and Iraq are moving forward with an apocalyptic agenda: to create the regional war and...

Friday August 4, 2006

Weekend reading, and other myths

The CC blog chaplain just e-mailed to say that what I really should read this weekend is Paul Johnson's "Modern Times." I had to confess to him that I probably won't get anything read but the newspaper, not with two...

Friday August 4, 2006

"Sucks?"

At last: the case for using the word "sucks" as a descriptive term in polite-ish company.I don't buy it. Well, I half-buy it. The gist is that "sucks" has become so common that it's lost its vulgar sexual connotation. I...

Friday August 4, 2006

The romance of victimhood

Last night at bedtime, I re-read Flannery O'Connor's "Everything that Rises Must Converge" and "The Enduring Chill," both of which have been mentioned here in recent days. I continue to be amazed at the piercing insight O'Connor had into the...

Friday August 4, 2006

Reality vs. Rumsfeld

Sen. H.R. Clinton is calling on Donald Rumsfeld to resign. Good for her. Here's what she had to say:"The secretary has lost credibility with the Congress and with the people," she said. "It's time for him to step down and...

Friday August 4, 2006

The Pinocchio Index

At the excellent new website Mercatornet.com, Matthew Mehan asks David Bosworth how we can measure cultural decline. Replied Bosworth:I sense a request for some sort of sociological index, and given my intellectual biases, which flee from the so-called numbers, I...

Friday August 4, 2006

Mother Teresa and Crunchy Cons

Reader Eddie O'Neill writes:I am almost finished with Crunchy Cons and have thoroughly enjoyed it. Well done! I learned of the book through Eric and Mary Brende. We ( my family and I) are good friends with them. We ran...

Friday August 4, 2006

Is it 1938 ... or 1914?

Clark Stooksbury posted a pithy comment in a combox below on the "1938 all over again" thread, saying that for the "warbot" crowd, it's always 1938, but never 1914. What he meant, of course, is that certain people are eager...

Friday August 4, 2006

1938 all over again

I got a call yesterday at the paper from a reader who was angry over an editorial I'd written taking the position that as bad as what Mel Gibson said was, we must keep clear in our minds (with ref....

Thursday August 3, 2006

A quality of mercy

I very much like this response to Mel Gibson from Rabbi Yitzchok Adlerstein. His attitude is basically: Look, if you just want a let's-kiss-and-make-up response from the Jewish community, forget it. But if you're serious about repentance, we want to...

Thursday August 3, 2006

On self-deception

OK, I lied. Just one more Gibson-related post, which is really about something else.Lawrence Auster, in his initial comments about Gibson's outburst, pays particular attention to something Gibson said in his second statement about the matter: I am in the...

Thursday August 3, 2006

MTV at 25

Here's a mildly amusing account of the first videos played on MTV, which launched 25 years ago this week. I haven't watched MTV in many years -- I think the "Beavis and Butt-head" era was the last time I looked...

Thursday August 3, 2006

The last Mel Gibson post

...for a while, I hope. I talked to someone in the press office at the Simon Wiesenthal Center, about doing an interview with Rabbi Hier for my section on Sunday, and the press contact said, "We're about all Melled out,...

Thursday August 3, 2006

Larison on the "Passion"

As far as I'm concerned, Daniel Larison offers the best commentary defending -- from a Christian point of view -- "The Passion of the Christ" against charges of anti-Semitism that I've seen since Mel opened his big fat mouth. His...

Thursday August 3, 2006

How hot is it outside?

Hot enough to make Revvum Pat convert!...

Thursday August 3, 2006

First Amendment right to pedophilia

A self-styled "pagan friar" is claiming in his criminal trial that he has a right to have sex with children under his First Amendment freedom of religion guarantees. Well, isn't that special? See, my religion says you deserve to have...

Thursday August 3, 2006

Faith Skordinski is a pit bull

And thank God for it. When you have so many high-ranking churchmen trying desperately to get away with something, you need pit bulls. And you know, with the Internet, you can't keep people who believe they've seen wrongdoing silent anymore....

Thursday August 3, 2006

Exactly!

See, this is the kind of Hollywood hypocrisy that rankles me about the Mel Gibson fiasco. As everybody in Hollywood rushes to pile onto Mel Gibson for his Jew-bashing idiocy -- and let me say again, he deserves to be...

Thursday August 3, 2006

Creeping fascination

I read the comboxes in this Caelum et Terra thread with creeping fascination. A person named Daniel Nichols has decided that I can't possibly be any kind of conservative, Christian or decent person because I support Israel's war on Hezbollah....

Thursday August 3, 2006

Community building

Got an e-mail from a CC reader in Sasquatch Country:I live in Washington State. Are there any organic farms in run by orthodox Christians in Washington State?I dunno, are there? Somebody here know the answer?There was a combox thread the...

Wednesday August 2, 2006

You decide

Who's got the better handle on the Mel Gibson situation, Andrew Sullivan:It is also a defining moment for American Christianism. Christianists protected, promoted, lionized and harbored this Jew-hater. And they need to be held account for it in a terribly...

Wednesday August 2, 2006

Robert Sloan is leaving Baylor

This just in: Baylor University chancellor Robert Sloan is leaving Baylor to become the next president of Houston Baptist University, pending the expected confirmation of the HBU board next week. You read it here first. From a press release HBU...

Wednesday August 2, 2006

Resume-padding in our time

When asked this summer by a journalist about her lack of pastoral experience, ECUSA Presiding Bishop-elect Katharine Jefferts Schori replied, "I think that experience is a rather narrow perspective." Well, you can certainly see why she would say that....

Wednesday August 2, 2006

Podcasting

I've not been paying a lot of attention to podcasts because I hadn't had the time to listen to them. My commute to the office is only about 10 minutes, during which time I listen to public radio. But since...

Wednesday August 2, 2006

Mainline goes bananas (again)

When last we checked in on the Presbyterian Church (USA), they were trying to decide on new, politically correct names for the Holy Trinity. Now comes news that Westminster John Knox Press, part of PCUSA's official publishing house, is releasing...

Wednesday August 2, 2006

Larison and the Eternal Arab

Dan Larison has some typically thoughtful criticism of my recent DMN column defending Israel in its fight with Hezbollah. He takes issue with my use of Psalm 83 as a lead-in to my piece (by the way, when I wrote...

Wednesday August 2, 2006

An existential conflict

The journalist Amir Taheri writes that the war between Israel and Hezbollah is no normal war over conventional goals, but a religious war between the West and Islam. Excerpt:This war is one of many battles to be fought between those...

Wednesday August 2, 2006

Don't try this at home!

You had better be sitting down before you read this. I don't know whether this woman was extremely courageous, extremely insane, or both. I just know that I've never heard of anything like it. I let Mrs. CC, who is...

Wednesday August 2, 2006

The artist as dirtbag

In the comboxes on the Gibson thread below, Michael of 2Blowhards links to his long, excellent reflection on the celebrated Texas songwriter Townes Van Zandt, who lived hard -- real hard -- and died early. His work is transcendently beautiful....

Tuesday August 1, 2006

Priest escapes

A Roman Catholic priest wanted in the US on suspicion of abusing three boys in the 1980s, and who was living and working in the shadow of the Vatican, has disappeared on the eve of his being shipped back to...

Tuesday August 1, 2006

My column about Israel

I wrote this in today's Dallas Morning News, saying that if Israel doesn't prevail against Hezbollah, a much worse war is coming -- and that the US has a moral as well as a self-interested obligation to support Israel.Richard Cohen...

Tuesday August 1, 2006

"The Mission" and us

Over at the First Things blog, my friends Robert T. Miller and Frederica Mathewes-Green are debating Pope Benedict's appeal to both Israel and Hezbollah to drop their arms and stop fighting. Robert, who is Catholic, criticizes the Pope's position:It may...

Tuesday August 1, 2006

Kevin Cosgrove

Michelle Malkin posts something well worth remembering about the stakes of this war as brave Israeli soldiers confront genocidal Islamofascism. Watch till the very end, if you can stand it....

Tuesday August 1, 2006

Castro in the hospital

You praying for his recovery? Not me. Cuba has suffered long enough....

Tuesday August 1, 2006

Art from the artist

Mel Gibson is not only a drunk, but he's a Jew-hater. That's pretty indisputable. The idea that having a few drinks can make someone say what they don't really believe is risible, especially to those of us -- ahem --...

Tuesday August 1, 2006

1.5 cheers for Evangelical pastor

Did you see the NYT story from the weekend about the Rev. Greg Boyd, an Evangelical megachurch pastor who has caused controversy by telling his congregation to get out of conservative politics? The gist:Before the last presidential election, he preached...

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About Crunchy Con

Rod Dreher is an editorial columnist for the Dallas Morning News, and author of "Crunchy Cons" (Crown Forum), a nonfiction book about conservatives, most of them religious, whose faith and political convictions sometimes put them at odds with mainstream conservatives. The views expressed in this blog are his own.

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