Crunchy Con

January 2008 Archives

Thursday January 31, 2008

Categories: Orthodoxy

"The treason of the bishops"

Some readers are aware that the Orthodox Church in America, my church, is undergoing a huge scandal now centered on the hierarchy -- especially Metropolitan Herman and his coterie at church headquarters. It involves money, mostly, but also -- it has been alleged -- sexual impropriety of some of the players. The scandal has been going on for quite some time, and the bishops, being bishops, cannot or will not take decisive action to clean out the Augean stables. What is it with bishops, anyway? Anyway, should you care to, you can read all about the scandal at the exhaustive OCANews.org site, which has become an invaluable source of news and commentary on the mess.

I've not made this scandal an issue on this blog because I learned the hard way how easy it is for me to get caught up in this kind of controversy, to my own great spiritual detriment. It's not that I'm holding the OCA to a different standard than the Roman Catholic Church, my former communion, which I devoted an immense amount of time and energy criticizing for its corruption regarding the sex abuse scandal. It's rather that I know that I have to exercise spiritual self-discipline, knowing my own weaknesses. I must say, though, how impressed I am with the laity and some of the clergy of the OCA, who are in open revolt against the hierarchy. Read, for example, this recent thread on OCANews. People aren't willing to sit silently and let the bishops destroy the Church by their dithering, their weakness and inaction (to say nothing of the kind of corruption that led the Diocese of Alaska recently to ordain to minor clerical orders a convicted child molester; did these people learn nothing from the public agony of the Catholic Church in recent years?!). It is interesting, and heartening to me, to see that people aren't demanding changes in church doctrine, or anything like that. They only want the bishops to act like sober Christian men, and reform the church's government.

This is something I never could understand as a Catholic, and that I cannot understand as an Orthodox: why do men who are given the awesome authority of shepherding souls act in this way? Why do they have such a sense of entitlement? Do they even fear God, or believe in Him?

I love my parish in Dallas, and the good people there. I have not troubled to learn about, or even think much, about that national hierarchy and its troubles. I've focused only on my own spiritual life, and the life of my friends in the parish. And I don't regret it. I don't often read OCANews.org, though I'm very glad it's there. Lately, though, the more I hear from trusted laypeople about developments in the scandal, and the hierarchy's response, the sadder it makes me because I have seen the same dynamic play out in the Catholic Church. And it has led straight downhill.

So, I commend to my Orthodox brothers and sisters -- as well as my Catholic friends, and friends in every Christian church -- the insights of Phil Lawler, a very brave and faithful orthodox Catholic journalist, and a friend. Phil has a new book out chronicling the demise of Catholicism in Boston, which Phil, as a Massachusetts Catholic, knows started long before the John Geoghan case in 2002. Here, from "The Faithful Departed," is Phil on what happened to Catholicism in Boston, and why:

The entire massive structure of Catholicism totters along on borrowed time. But the trend is clear. That whole structure will come crashing down, perhaps within the next generation, unless there is some dramatic change. Yet the Church establishment gives no sign of changing, or even seeking to change. Quite the contrary; pastors and bishops alike studiously ignore the handwriting on the wall and pretend to conduct business as usual.

Catholic leaders today have resources that the twelve Apostles could never have imagined. They have undergone years of formal training, honing the skills for thier ministry. They have access to every means of instant communication, including newspapers and electronic media. They control schools at every level, from kindergartens to universities. Their holdings in real estate alone are worth billions of dollars. Their flocks are (by reputation, at least) the most highly educated Catholic lay people in history. Yet the Church they guide is a shambles.

The Apostles were poor, uneducated, provincial. yet their efforts brought the Gospel to every nation on earth. Today in comfortable suburbs, just down the street from the parish church, one can readily find people who, quite literally, have never heard the Gospel.

Phil goes on to catalogue the calamity that has engulfed American Catholicism. Empty seminaries and convents. Catholic families who don't know the faith, and don't much care. And so on. The glory days are behind the Catholic Church, he says -- but there is always hope. The Church began with 12 apostles who had nothing but their faith. To be truly faithful, Phil says, to truly love the Church, is to see her as she is:

I love the Catholic Church. But love for the Church does not mean unquestioning love for every institution within Catholicism, any more than the love for one's spouse would extend to a cancer within the spouse's body.

When Church agencies begin to serve earthly aims, they become truly cancerous. They may grow rapidly and absorb tremendous amounts of energy -- and they steadily drain real spiritual strength away from the Church. And in any case, the accumulation of earthly resources is pointless; that battle is already lost.

The Church as a whole is the Body of Christ, incorruptible. Individual organizations within the Church are very much corruptible, however, and in America today they are very much corrupt. Loving the Church means denouncing the corruption. Denouncing the corruption, in turn, means protecting the inner strength of our Church, clinging jealously to our one, last, infallible hope.

The same corruption that produced the sex-abuse scandal, the greatest crisis in the history of American Catholicism, remains widespread in the Church today. Indeed the corruption is more firmly entrenched now than it was in 2002 because the hierarchy has refused to acknowledge the most serious aspect of the scandal: the treason of the bishops.

Reform cannot begin until the corruption is acknowledged. And since the American hierarchy apparently cannot or will not recognize the corruption with itself, other Catholics must call the bishops to account and demand the sort of responsible pastoral leadership that the American Church has not seen for years. Under these circumstances lay Catholics who criticize their bishops are not showing their disrespect for the bishop's office. Quite the contrary. Those who revere the authority of a Catholic bishops should protect that authority -- if necessary, even from the man who occupies the office.

Amen and amen. This man has thought and investigated more deeply about the crisis in the faith he loves than just about anybody I know. We must listen to him! If the laity and the concerned clergy of the OCA don't stand up and defeat this corruption now, no matter how much the tiny OCA should grow in wealth, numbers and influence in the years to come, it won't mean a thing.

Thursday January 31, 2008

Categories: Democrats

The declining Kennedy brand

Froma Harrop of the Providence Journal is one of the better liberal columnists writing today. And she just about lost her lunch over the Kennedy Obamafest earlier this week. Excerpt:

JFK was indeed a charismatic figure, but the more we learn about his Camelot in Washington, the less perfect it sounds. (One might start at the 1960 election, which was stolen with an assist by the mob.) Daughter Caroline was adorable, but could someone please explain her cosmic significance today?

The career of dynasty elder, Ted Kennedy, meanwhile, is headed for a disgraceful end. The Massachusetts senator has been caught in a sneaky plot to kill a clean-energy project in Nantucket Sound. Seems he doesn't want to see wind turbines from his waterfront estate. "Don't you realize -- that's where I sail!" he famously said.

The heck with his constituents, who live with some of the foulest coal-burning plants in the country. The heck with the United States, trying to free itself from foreign oil. The heck with the planet, threatened by global warming. Environmentalists now boo at the Kennedy name -- not that many in the media have noticed.

Thursday January 31, 2008

Categories: Catholicism

Marcial Maciel is dead

Marcial Maciel, the founder of the conservative religious order the Legion of Christ, has died of natural causes at 87. He had been disciplined by Pope Benedict following multiple accusations of sex abuse from early in his priesthood. He died in disgrace, with the Vatican directing him to retire and withdraw rather than face further investigation and prosecution.

Jason Berry writes about the Maciel case here, and in many other places. Additionally, here is the website of ReGain, an organization of ex-Legionaries and others now highly critical of Maciel and his work. One aspect of the accusations against Maciel that struck me is that his nine accusers were all professionally accomplished laymen at the time they went public. They did not ask for money, and they had a lot to lose by going public as victims of molestation -- especially accusing a very powerful religious leader. Clearly by the time Benedict became pope, the Vatican had been convinced that Maciel was guilty of something.

It's in God's hands now.

UPDATE: I know this is a very sensitive topic, and my views about the Catholic hierarchy and the cover-up of sexual abuse are strong and well-known. I want to underscore, however, that I invite people of all opinions on the matter of Fr. Maciel and the LCs to express themselves here. If you believe Fr. Maciel was treated unjustly, please feel free to say so. And those who disagree, likewise. Let's keep it civil, tho'...

Thursday January 31, 2008

Categories: Islam, Media

Covering Islam in America

Here's a pretty great interview from ReligionWriter.com, an impressive blog run by Andrea Useem, a religion writer and American convert to Islam. The interview subject is my pal Terry Mattingly. Andrea and Terry talk about the difficulties of reporters writing about Islam in America. Excerpt:

RW: But to go back to the idea of religion “ghosts” being important in all stories, doesn’t that pose a problem? If an editor in Omaha says, “Yes, 9/11 is a story about religion,” and then dispatches a reporter to a local mosque to write a story on Islam and terrorism, then the reporter walks in with a template, looking for a way to connect a local Muslim community with international terrorism.

Mattingly: Of course a lot of Muslims feel attacked; they feel like reporters are constantly asking, “Explain to us why they did this.” At the same time, they feel just as attacked when you ask a factual question, like why were there some Muslims celebrating on 9/11? That’s a “When did you stop beating your wife?” question. But it’s a question that has to be asked.

There is a crisis in American journalism of being able to quote Muslims of different levels of Muslim belief who will critique each other: Reporters just don’t feel they can do it. What’s the journalistic solution? “Let’s call some Muslim experts.” So now a faculty member at Georgetown is explaining what is or isn’t Islam, which to me is almost like a form of cultural imperialism–

RW: But what choice does the journalist have? If a journalist goes into a mosque, and an American Muslim says, “Anybody who commits an act of terrorism is not a Muslim,” the journalist can’t just report that, right? Because the truth is, that American Muslim has no right to “fire” someone from being Muslim, at least no more right than al-Qaeda has to say that American Muslim isn’t Muslim. So the journalists themselves have to make sense of the Muslim world, and the Muslims they are interviewing often can’t do it for them.

Mattingly: You have to report that there is radical disagreement, and there is no central authority. The thing is, Osama believes there is a central authority.

RW: You mean he sees himself as the central authority?

Mattingly: Himself, and a certain body of teaching. If you want to watch the heads of reporters spin, try explaining the differences between Osama and the Saudis. You look at it on the page, and it looks like they are cut from one piece of Wahhabi cloth.

RW: And yet they are bitter enemies, trying to kill each other.

Mattingly: Exactly. So you ask, “Is this Arab tribalism here?” At some point journalists are just going to check out. They want to say, “Someone tell us who the good guys and bad guys are, and let us get on with our jobs.” But there are some religious issues where you simply can’t do that.

This is where I’m frustrated by what shows up in polls of Muslims: the 9/11 conspiracy thing, “we’re not willing to condemn all acts of violence, because some are justified,” and then you ask: “Which ones?” We’re covering an argument in which the participants themselves are almost afraid to take part. Journalists are great at covering arguments, but how do you cover one that is, A. so complex, B. we don’t understand it, and C., the very people taking part in the debate itself as scared to talk?

The American religious market, including me — especially me — is struggling to get up to speed on the factual material of Islam. For us, these are new stories.

Read the whole thing. Really smart questions, really smart answers. The US media want this to be an easy story to cover, to fit its simplistic template. But it's not.

Thursday January 31, 2008

Categories: Decline and fall

Come and get us

While President Bush talks as if he's going to keep our troops indefinitely in Iraq, and John McCain, the presumptive GOP nominee, says we'll stay a hundred years if we need to, an independent commission established by Congress has just issued a report saying that the U.S. military is not ready to defend against a catastrophic attack on the homeland. Excerpt:

The commission's 400-page report concludes that the nation "does not have sufficient trained, ready forces available" to respond to a chemical, biological or nuclear weapons incident, "an appalling gap that places the nation and its citizens at greater risk."

"Right now we don't have the forces we need, we don't have them trained, we don't have the equipment," commission Chairman Arnold Punaro said in an interview with The Associated Press. "Even though there is a lot going on in this area, we need to do a lot more. ... There's a lot of things in the pipeline, but in the world we live in — you're either ready or you're not."

Clearly these commissioners are traitors. Waterboard them, quick!

Thursday January 31, 2008

The other side of the mortgage story

I was talking with a friend who works in the home mortgage field, and brought up the case of Susan and Michael Walker, which I'd seen on ABC World News. They're a family desperate to keep their house, which they...

Thursday January 31, 2008

Blasphemy in the UK

The Archbishop of Canterbury is proposing new laws to forbid, get this, "thoughtless and ... cruel styles of speaking and acting." From an account of Dr. Rowan Williams' address: Challenging the liberal argument that free speech must always prevail, Williams...

Wednesday January 30, 2008

Categories: Culture

Walking away from honor

I mentioned the other day that couple in the "60 Minutes" segment who has decided to walk away from their mortgage, even though they can afford it. The house is suddenly worth less than they owe on it, so hey,...

Wednesday January 30, 2008

Categories: Republicans

Mrs. Huckabee

I'm with Ross: I sure would have liked to have seen and heard more from Janet Huckabee this campaign season. Some wonderful highlights from Slate's profile of Mike Huckabee's wife: Because back home, the Huckabees' empathy for the luckless is...

Wednesday January 30, 2008

Categories: Culture, Food

A nation of fatties

I was whining to my wife last night about how much weight I've put on this winter. The reason isn't hard to figure out. I quit exercising, and I've been eating too much sugar and carbohydrate. I had to go...

Wednesday January 30, 2008

Categories: Iraq

King George and the Signing Decrees

You know, this is outrageous. Out-freaking-rageous. Once again, George W. Bush declares that he won't be bound by Congress's laws, not when they get in the way of his plans for Iraq. Yes, once again, the signing statements are back....

Wednesday January 30, 2008

Categories: Culture, Family

The child-man

Did we talk about this yet? I can't remember. Anyway, I wanted to bring to your attention a provocative piece by Kay Hymowitz of the Manhattan Institute, in which she analyzes the phenomenon of the Child-Man. We published a version...

Wednesday January 30, 2008

Categories: Republicans

Always our Derb

I love Derb, now and forever. Here's his comment to conservatives about last night's Florida results: Oh, stop whining. So what if the likely GOP nominee believes in restraints on free speech, higher taxation, bigger government, open borders, and 100-year...

Wednesday January 30, 2008

Categories: Culture, Food

Re-thinking the meat guzzler

I am an enthusiastic carnivore. I love meat. I mean, I really love meat. My dad, a child of the Depression, wasn't upset if we kids didn't eat all our vegetables, but we couldn't leave the table unless we'd eaten...

Wednesday January 30, 2008

Categories: Culture, Education

The destructive diversity industry

It is generally acknowledged by Europeans that their official multicultural policy has failed. The reasons are several, and the effects manifold, but one of the main ones is that encouraging people in a pluralistic society to think of their differences...

Wednesday January 30, 2008

Brown v. Black

Writing in City Journal, Steven Malanga explores the real and growing divide between African-Americans and Latinos. We've seen this emerge in the Clinton v. Obama contest, and here in Dallas, we've seen this get ugly between black and brown factions...

Tuesday January 29, 2008

The new (Evangelical) monastics

The Los Angeles Times profiles young Evangelicals who, having grown weary of soft, suburbanized Christianity, have chosen to live monastically, in community with each other. Here's how the story begins: BILLINGS, MONT. -- In a peeling house on South 32nd...

Tuesday January 29, 2008

Categories: Democrats

Jimmy Obama?

Mark Krikorian tells me to relax, that if Obama becomes president, he wouldn't be able to do for liberalism what Reagan did for conservatism, because he's so haplessly liberal he'd screw up at every turn. A friend of mine seems...

Tuesday January 29, 2008

Categories: Islamic terrorism

The disgraceful Coughlin affair

Last fall, I met Maj. Steve Coughlin at a Washington conference regarding the Muslim Brotherhood. He was at the time a Pentagon intelligence analyst who had done a lot of work on jihad ideology, and was convinced that the US...

Tuesday January 29, 2008

Poulos backs Romney, Obama

Best political commentary you're likely to read today is James Poulos's explanation of why he's endorsing Mitt Romney for the GOP nomination and Barack Obama for the Democratic nomination (and why he's not going for Hillary Clinton and John McCain)....

Tuesday January 29, 2008

Categories: International, Iraq

Invincible ignorance

After all this time, Bush has learned nothing about foreign policy. This, from his State of the Union address last night. Emphases mine: [B]uilding a prosperous future for our citizens also depends on confronting enemies abroad and advancing liberty in...

Tuesday January 29, 2008

Categories: Culture

The good old days

I would be cash money that more than one in our little online circle here believes that if it weren't for the laugh track, this hilarious old comic short would represent how conservatives really believe the world should be run...

Monday January 28, 2008

Categories: Islam

Poking the dragon

Nobody ever accuses the Brussels Journal of being soft on Islamic extremism in Europe. Which is one reason why this thoughtful Thomas Landen essay the BJ published that's strongly critical of Geert Wilders' proposed movie trashing the Koran is worth...

Monday January 28, 2008

Categories: Not the Onion

White man's burden

Presenting, via John Podhoretz and Andrew Sullivan, the most terrifying video of a white man doing that voodoo that we do so well since Mitt Romney had a "bling bling" sighting whilst on a cultural anthropological mission in Florida. I...

Monday January 28, 2008

Categories: Democrats

Torch has been pahssed

(Or was that just gas? Got yer back, Bugg!) I watched Teddy Kennedy's speech on Obama's behalf today, and Obama's response. I just about howled when Obama said this: Ted Kennedy stands apart from the prevailing wisdom in Washington that...

Monday January 28, 2008

Categories: Democrats

The Empire Strikes Back

A politically astute friend e-mails to say he hopes for Michelle Obama's sake that her husband doesn't have a girlfriend, because if he does, we're about to find out about it. Ah, the Clintons. I missed them so. In the...

Monday January 28, 2008

Categories: Varia

Hitler was a Cowboys fan

This is one of the funniest things I've seen in ages:...

Monday January 28, 2008

Categories: Democrats

Spengler: No, Barack, we can't.

Spengler was less impressed with Barack Obama's SC victory speech than many of us. To put it mildly: Obama's South Carolina victory speech was the economic equivalent of a carnival snake-oil pitch. He promised to "stop giving tax breaks to...

Sunday January 27, 2008

Categories: Culture, Decline and fall

The dogma of desire

I can't remember which thread it was on recently, but our friend and frequent commentator Franklin JENNINGS [not Evans, as I originally said -- my apologies to both Franklins] said, "My heart is infallible." As I recall, Franklin was responding...

Sunday January 27, 2008

Dildos versus scimitars

Here's Christopher Caldwell writing about the current situation in Holland: The Netherlands has spent the past several weeks in a political crisis out of a novel by Borges. People are worried that a politician might say something he has already...

Sunday January 27, 2008

Categories: Democrats

That special Clinton consistency

"People don't change," says uberliberal Frank Rich (!), detailing why a "Billary" nomination would be a gift from heaven for the beleaguered Republicans. How come? Here's part of the reason: To get a taste of what surprises may be in...

Sunday January 27, 2008

Categories: Democrats

Obama is the Democrats' Reagan

Obama beat the Clintons like a drum tonight. And then he beat their sorry [deleted] again in this magnificent victory speech. Watch the speech. Really, watch: if this man gets his party's nomination, he's going to be the next president....

Saturday January 26, 2008

Nocera the Bear

I've become a fan of Joseph Nocera's business column in the Saturday edition of the New York Times for the same reason I like public radio's Marketplace business program: both make the affairs of business and the economy comprehensible to...

Saturday January 26, 2008

Categories: Democrats

The Obama threat

A conservative friend in NYC told me last night that he intends to vote for John McCain in the GOP primary. He added, "If Obama is elected president, I would think, 'OK, let's see how this turns out.' But Hillary?...

Saturday January 26, 2008

Categories: Media

Why newspapers suck: A theory

Here in Dallas, my friend Wick Allison, a magazine publisher, has a theory that one reason newspapers are losing readers is that they are so boring to read. No premium is placed on good, stylish writing. The prose is affectless....

Friday January 25, 2008

Categories: Orthodoxy

Orthodox podcasting in our time

I do a short weekly podcast with Father Chris Metropulos of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese, posted on the Orthodox Christian Network (a great source for all kinds of Orthodox Christian commentary). Here's the latest, in which we talk about abortion...

Friday January 25, 2008

Categories: Culture

We Were Marlboro Men Once

Dallas writer Zac Crain's new piece about his struggle to quit smoking is a great piece of writing, but what makes it especially interesting is his recounting of the history of smoking culture in Dallas. I imagine what he found...

Friday January 25, 2008

Categories: Islam

Update on the Islamic Larison

Daniel addresses his youthful flirtation with Islam here, in a post tearing into people who smear Obama as Muslim. According to Larison, he never really converted to Islam, but professed it idiosyncratically ...mostly out of an attraction at the time...

Friday January 25, 2008

Categories: Islam, Orthodoxy

Whistling past the Orthodox graveyard

Gotta say I agree with Charlotte Allen's dismissal of the new book about Orthodoxy by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, which she reviews in today's Wall Street Journal. I read much of the book in galleys a couple of months ago, but...

Friday January 25, 2008

Categories: Conservatism

Policing conservatism from within

In a combox on the Bramwell thread, reader Dale Price says: I listened to a dismaying exchange between Laura Ingraham and Byron York this morning on the former's radio talk show. I appreciate Ingraham's work as a general rule, but...

Thursday January 24, 2008

Categories: Conservatism

Bramwell: What conservatism is, and is not

Somehow I missed this stout piece by Austin Bramwell, who was asked to leave the National Review board by Bill Buckley shortly after Buckley had put him (controversially) on it. I know Austin a little bit from my days in...

Thursday January 24, 2008

Categories: Conservatism, Culture, Family

Kids these days

I was talking on the phone yesterday with a conservative acquaintance who mentioned that he'd been listening to Laura Ingraham's radio show. I forget what the topic was, but he said that he likes her show in general, but she...

Thursday January 24, 2008

Categories: Economics

Spending your rebate

Most of us are going to get checks from the government to encourage us to spend money to keep the economy from going into recession: Under the plan, as many as 117 million people would get rebate checks. Individual income...

Thursday January 24, 2008

Categories: Food

Against cloned beef

I'm with Verlyn Klinkenborg: who, exactly, benefits from screwing around with livestock genetics like this? Is the further industrialization of our food production really the way we ought to be going? Klinkenborg says: To me, this striving for uniformity is...

Thursday January 24, 2008

Categories: Culture, Media

Affirmative action for conservative journalists?

Terry Mattingly publishes a letter he received from someone he identifies as a "person in a public-radio newsroom." Terry had earlier blogged about public radio's tin ear for religious sensitivities, referencing a tasteless radio skit about the Eucharist and Mike...

Thursday January 24, 2008

Categories: Islam

The Islamic Larison

As my regular readers know, one of my favorite bloggers is the Russian Orthodox traditional conservative Daniel Larison. I didn't realize until today that he spent a "short, very unfortunate and lamented" time in his early adulthood as a convert...

Thursday January 24, 2008

Categories: Economics

The overachiever

Un-freaking-believable: a 31-year-old fraudster costs one of the world's top banks $7.1 billion, making it the largest bank fraud in world history. For some reason, this story reminds me of something a journalist friend once told me. She had been...

Thursday January 24, 2008

Baptists? Who, us?

Here's an interesting question submitted to an advice column in a newsmagazine for Texas Baptists: Our church is talking seriously about sponsoring a new congregation in our area. But we seem headed for a meltdown. Several folks insist “Baptist” must...

Wednesday January 23, 2008

Categories: Republicans

Behold! A Mayonnaise Golem!

I know, it's mean to bring it up again, but I just can't get enough of hip Hoppy keepin' in real with the people:...

Wednesday January 23, 2008

Categories: Republicans

The pro-life Ron Paul

I love this: Dr. Paul said his efforts to overturn Roe vs. Wade aren't at odds with his libertarian philosophies. "I honor and respect the notion that our homes are our castles, and I don't want the government in...

Wednesday January 23, 2008

Categories: Economics

A new economic era

Fascinating walk-up piece to Davos from the International Herald Tribune. This passage caught my eye: According to Stephen Roach, chief economist for Asia at Morgan Stanley, who will also be among the 2,400 participants in Davos to ponder what forum...

Wednesday January 23, 2008

Categories: Culture

Heath Ledger dies

I've got nothing to say about it, except that it's sad, and Lord have mercy on him. When I was a film critic, I used to interview actors, and with a few exceptions I couldn't fail to be impressed, negatively,...

Wednesday January 23, 2008

Categories: Democrats

My so-called Obama love

I wrote a column the other day based on the blog entry here in which my pal Doug LeBlanc, a conservative Evangelical Republican, wrote of his temptation to vote for Obama. Richard Spencer at Takimag seems to believe that I'm...

Wednesday January 23, 2008

Categories: Iraq

Farewell, best and brightest

Meant to blog the other day on the departure of Army Lt. Col. John Nagl, a high-profile counterinsurgency expert who is leaving the military to work at a think tank. He says it's not the strain of repeated deployments that's...

Wednesday January 23, 2008

Categories: Economics

Are you feeling stimulated yet?

Robert Reich says Washington is casting fiscal responsibility to the wind in an attempt to avoid a recession (brought on by, whaddaya know, casting fiscal responsibility to the wind). He has a memorable metaphor to explain why a certain proposal...

Wednesday January 23, 2008

Categories: Varia

The Edmonds file and espionage

Remember that explosive Sunday Times of London story I linked to a couple of weeks ago, in which a former FBI translator made extraordinary claims regarding the alleged involvement of American officials in the selling of nuclear secrets to agents...

Tuesday January 22, 2008

Chambers vs. Reagan

Great news: ISI now publishes a web journal called First Principles. From its inaugural issue: an essay pondering whether Whittaker Chambers was wrong when he said that he had left the winning side (communism) for the losing side. Excerpt: A...

Tuesday January 22, 2008

Categories: Republicans

Can Huck reinvent himself?

I've said before that I think Huckabee, assuming he doesn't get the GOP nomination this year, would do well to spend the next four years doing a lot of thinking and organizing, thereby positioning himself well for the 2012 race....

Tuesday January 22, 2008

Categories: Decline and fall

The depth of America's crisis

I very much identify with this statement from Andrew Sullivan: My own view is that America's crisis is a very deep one. The markets are reflecting the fact that seven years of Bush have added $32 trillion to future debt,...

Tuesday January 22, 2008

Categories: Conservatism

Conservatives: Leave the NYC-DC bubble

In that same post, Larison has some good advice for the conservative think tanks and opinion-shapers: get outside of the New York City-Washington, DC bubble, and get to know the actual country you live in, and the Red Staters you...

Tuesday January 22, 2008

Categories: Republicans

The closing of the conservative mind

Another good column from David Brooks today, this one touching on the revolution underway among conservatives -- one that's dramatically undermining the movement's leadership. That is, they're trying to lead, trying to act like Reaganism is still relevant and viable...

Monday January 21, 2008

Categories: Islamic terrorism

Shocked, shocked.

Oh dear me, I am taken utterly aback. Spanish police have found bomb materials in -- wait for it -- two mosques! I am at a loss for words. Nobody could possibly have seen this coming. Excerpt: The police arrested...

Monday January 21, 2008

Categories: Conservatism

What's next for conservative talk radio?

Liberal talk radio is, as has been demonstrated by the dismal experience of Air America, a bad joke. But the vastly more popular and (therefore) effective conservative talk radio is showing its weakness. Here's Michael Medved, a popular right-wing radio...

Monday January 21, 2008

Categories: Republicans

The whitest man in the world

Oh dear sweet lord, Uber-Yankee Mitt Romney demonstrates that he's got no Elvis in him. On behalf of all white people, I tuck my chin in, bite my finger and laugh through my nose, hoping not to be noticed. This...

Monday January 21, 2008

Categories: Media

Why mainstream journalism is in pain

Let's start by saying that most journalists, and most people who think about these questions (which is, I would guess, a small minority of the public), have a theory, and the theory is most likely wrong, because it's usually designed...

Sunday January 20, 2008

Categories: Republicans

Yes! Obviously!

Dan Larison has a eureka moment: "Romney is Al Gore." Great call. How on earth did we not see it before?...

Sunday January 20, 2008

Categories: Democrats

What's