Crunchy Con

Rod Dreher: June 2009 Archives

Tuesday June 30, 2009

Categories: Republicans

Mark Sanford, would you please go now?

The governor of South Carolina digs himself in deeper. For some odd reason, he's elaborating with the media on his eventful erotic life. Excerpt:

In an interview with The Associated Press at his Statehouse office, Mr. Sanford said that those flirtations had "crossed the line" and that he had let his "guard down" by engaging in some physical contact with women other than his wife, Jenny Sanford. But, he said, with the exception of the sexual relationship he began last year with , María Belén Chapur, the Argentine woman, those flirtations "didn't cross the sex line."

The new disclosures put Mr. Sanford's ability to remain governor back in doubt just when such concerns seemed to have been abating.

Mr. Sanford has admitted taking a special trip to Buenos Aires to visit with Ms. Chapur last year during an official visit to South America. He has promised to repay the costs.

On Tuesday, in disclosing several other assignations with Ms. Chapur in Manhattan and the Hamptons over the last year, Mr. Sanford said he had not spent any other state money on his illicit visits.

"I was very careful," he said. "Everything was paid for in cash."

Classy! But wait, there's more:

He also told The A.P. that he believed Ms. Chapur was his soul mate, but that he was trying to fall back in love with his wife.

"This was a whole lot more than a simple affair; this was a love story," he told The A.P. "A forbidden one, a tragic one, but a love story at the end of the day."

Just stop.

Tuesday June 30, 2009

Anti-religious bigotry of scientists

One of my colleagues at the Templeton Cambridge fellowship, Edwin Cartlidge, decided to do his Templeton project on philosophical materialism and its relationship to science. He approached A.C. Grayling and Daniel Dennett, two prominent materialists, and asked for an interview for the project. They both refused, saying that they want nothing to do with anything related to the Templeton Foundation. Richard Dawkins reprints Cartlidge's request, and adds a misleading pejorative remark: that Cartlidge and other journalists (including me) are being "paid" to sit there and attend the conference. All of us won fellowships, which included cash stipends. What Dawkins doesn't tell you is that one of the conditions of the fellowship is the journalist is not supposed to be at his regular job during the two months of his fellowship. I don't know what my colleagues are doing, but in my case, I'm not getting a paycheck from my employer during these two months. I'm living off the Templeton stipend, which allows me to devote my full time to reading and research in my topic area. Same with Ed Cartlidge.

Not that it matters, or should matter, but I spent two weeks with Ed in Cambridge, and it was not my impression that he is a theist of any kind. I could be wrong about that, though. At no point in the application process did Templeton ask any of us what our religious views were. As far as I can tell, Templeton chose Ed because of his experience as a journalist, and because they thought his project proposal was interesting.

I wish to associate myself with the response of Templeton's Gary Rosen, posted to the Dawkins blog:

A.C. Grayling and Daniel Dennett have refused to talk to a serious journalist (Edwin Cartlidge of Physics World) about a serious subject (philosophical materialism) because the journalism fellowship under which he is pursuing this subject is sponsored by the Templeton Foundation. They will have nothing to do with the Templeton Foundation, they say, because our aim is somehow to "muddy the waters" about the relationship between science and religion.

That's not how we see it at all. First-rate, peer-reviewed science is essential to our work at the Foundation and to the progressive vision of the late Sir John Templeton, who was deeply committed to scientific discovery. Many of our largest grants go to pure scientific research (like our support for the Foundational Questions Institute in Physics and Cosmology, the Godel Centenary Research Prize Fellowships, and the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics at Harvard).

But, yes, we do like to include philosophers and theologians in many of our projects. Excellent science is crucial to what we do, but it is not all that we do. We are a "Big Questions" foundation, not a science foundation, and we believe that the world's philosophical and religious traditions have much to contribute to understanding human experience and our place in the universe. For Grayling and Dennett to compare this rich, expansive discussion to a dialogue with astrologers is silly. They know better.

What on earth is wrong with that?

If you go back and read the Dennett and Grayling responses, you'll see that they are unwilling to talk to Ed because they're afraid that somebody, somewhere might, through the work of Templeton, come to believe that religion might have something to contribute to the development of science, or how science is used in our culture. What a ridiculous prejudice. I'm sorry Ed, a reputable science journalist, has to deal with these arrogant knotheads.

Tuesday June 30, 2009

Categories: Culture

Art and the world

I just ran across a really smart point by JL Wall, in response to last week's long Eminemmy discussion about the relationship between art, morality and community. Excerpt:

The matter of wondering where the limit should be drawn is nothing new, and it is not new that the question should often appear either unanswerable or the answer utterly arbitrary. Denying that there is a limit at all, however, is frequently more dangerous than misplacing it. Art for art's sake along will not suffice, though the piece may still be beautiful. Art is like anything else - it must exist in the real world, our world: in Wendell Berry's construction, "its real habitat is the household and the community."

Joyce's Ulysses and Pound's Cantos may not be common in the life of most households. But they are a part of my life and mind - exist, that is, in "my household" (though at 21 and in college, there isn't much of one) - and so long as I exist as a part of a community, they are a part of the lives of those communities of which I am also. Art must be consumed by the living, and so must enter life. The only way it can truly be for its own sake is for no human eye to ever behold the finished piece - for it not to be art.

Tuesday June 30, 2009

Categories: Iraq

The waste of Iraq

Philip Giraldi observes a sad truth about the US partial withdrawal from Iraq. Excerpt:

Iraq is headed by a strongman who intends to stay in power come what may, not unlike Saddam though representing a different constituency. The country continues to be one of the most corrupt in the world and electricity and water are in short supply, worse even then during Saddam's latter days.

US interests have hardly been served by the six year occupation. Apart from defense contractors and a few oil companies it is hard to imagine that anyone sees any benefits. 4319 Americans and at least 90,000 Iraqis killed violently since 2003. At a cost of maybe as much as $5 trillion when all the bills are paid by our grandchildren. Saddam's secularism has been replaced by a Shi'ite dominated power structure and Iraq's role as an Arab bulwark against Iranian hegemony is just a memory. The Christian minority, protected under Saddam, has more-or-less fled the country. Iran has benefited most from America's takedown of Saddam.

Tuesday June 30, 2009

Categories: Catholicism, Orthodoxy

Communion on the tongue, vs. hand

Non-Catholics may not realize that Catholics may receive the Host (= communion wafer) either on the tongue (the traditional way) or in hand (the far more common way today). When I was a Catholic, I received on the tongue normally -- that is, except when I was sick -- as a sign of respect for the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist. A few times when I was traveling, I'd find a priest who recoiled at that, but mostly they seemed fine with it, or at least showed no visible sign of objecting. So few American Catholics today receive on the tongue that you couldn't blame a priest for being surprised when one presented himself for communion in that way.

Patricia Snow, a Catholic, writes about this practice, which has been recently discouraged -- explicitly discouraged -- by US bishops as a protection against the spread of swine flu. She is not impressed. Excerpt:

[We] need to ask if an attitude of fastidiousness, a fear of physical contact between priest and communicant, is Catholic. What the priest consecrates--not just with his words, but with his hands--we eat. That physical contact is the point of the sacrament. Furthermore, we almost never receive the Eucharist alone; the Mass is a communal meal, a sharing in the one Cup, or at least the one Bread. The Mass is not a sterile environment.

It is true that recklessness is not holiness, and prudence is a cardinal virtue. But at what point does prudence become false prudence--Joseph Pieper's "anxious senility of a frantic self-preservation?" The Church has reached such a point when her professed belief in the Real Presence makes no concrete difference in the decisions she makes or the ways she behaves. At this point, the Church becomes indistinguishable from the world.

The Church seems in danger of forgetting that the communication of germs is not the only mystery at issue. The infinitely more sublime mystery is the communication of God himself, the source of all life and health. This is our faith. This is what we mean by the doctrine of the Real Presence, the mystery that reception of the Eucharist on the tongue both dramatizes and protects.

I needed to read this, actually, because after three years of being Orthodox, i still struggle a bit to accomodate myself to the Orthodox way of receiving communion: on a spoon, from a common cup. In Orthodoxy (as well, I believe, as in most of the Eastern Rites of the Roman Catholic Church), communion is offered as bread commingled with wine, in a chalice. Communicants have the priest serve them one at a time, from a common spoon. If you are a germophobe of any sort, it'll give you the hives. But you have no choice: if you want to receive communion, you have to deal with it. It was hard for me to get used to this, and sometimes -- like during cold and flu season -- it still is. When I'm really sick, I can't bring myself to receive communion, out of concern that I'm going to pass my sickness to my fellow parishioners. But perhaps my caution is an overreaction, or at least misplaced.

What are your thoughts about communion in the hand, versus on the tongue? Or Orthodox communion from a common cup?

Tuesday June 30, 2009

Categories: Law, Race

The race slog goes on

George F. Will, on the Ricci decision: Scalia, concurring separately, said Monday's ruling "merely postpones the evil day" on which the court must decide "whether, or to what extent," existing disparate-impact law conflicts with the 14th Amendment guarantee of equal...

Monday June 29, 2009

Categories: Not the Onion

Things that make you go hmm...

1. Bumper sticker I spied in Colorado Springs yesterday: "Drill, baby, drill." The sticker appeared on the bumper of a Smart Car. Parked outside of Whole Foods. 2. Big kerfuffle in Fort Worth as gay protesters complain that cops who...

Monday June 29, 2009

Categories: Race

Dallas reparations scheme goes awry

The federal corruption trial of prominent black Dallas politicians has gotten underway. It seems that the alleged bribe-demanders were, in a manner of speaking, simply trying to achieve racial justice and gain reparations on behalf of their people. From the...

Monday June 29, 2009

Huxley vs. Moralistic Therapeutic Deism

Just finished Chapter 17, the penultimate chapter, of "Brave New World," and it's a knockout. It's about the meaning of the human person and the murder of God -- and it's a blistering indictment of the kind of Christianity we've...

Monday June 29, 2009

Categories: Culture

Brave New Adulthood

I found a free text copy of Brave New World in full on the Internet. In this passage (beyond the jump), the dissident Bernard Marx discusses the druggy sex he had with his friend Lenina the night before. Marx hates...

Monday June 29, 2009

Categories: Environment

Endocrine disruptors and frog penises

Scary stuff. Here's Nick Kristof: Now scientists are connecting the dots with evidence of increasing abnormalities among humans, particularly large increases in numbers of genital deformities among newborn boys. For example, up to 7 percent of boys are now born...

Monday June 29, 2009

Categories: Law, Race

Racism loses at Supreme Court

SCOTUS has ruled that the city of New Haven was wrong to discriminate against white firefighters. Excerpt: The Supreme Court ruled Monday that white firefighters in New Haven, Conn., were unfairly denied promotions because of their race, reversing a decision...

Monday June 29, 2009

Water shortages in the West

I met a friend in Colorado Springs yesterday for a beer. We got to talking about gardening, and he said he and his wife have lots of trouble making things grow here. I told him that as gorgeous as it...

Monday June 29, 2009

Categories: Religion (general)

Bones of St. Paul confirmed

Happy feast day of St. Peter and St. Paul. News from Rome says that tests performed on the bones believed to be St. Paul's indicate something important. Says the Associated Press: The first-ever scientific test on what are believed to...

Sunday June 28, 2009

Categories: Culture

Michael Jackson: His freaky final months

Here's a pretty jaw-dropping insider's account of Michael Jackson's last months and years. He comes off as a kind of Howard Hughes figure, a drugged-out skeleton being controlled by vampires. Except he was a gay drugged-out skeleton being controlled by...

Sunday June 28, 2009

Categories: Culture

Best Michael Jackson memorial ever!

I deeply, seriously love this image from our longtime reader B.D. Rucker, who posted it in a combox: It's times like this I'm really glad I don't have cable TV. I heard about Michael's death (yes, I've long referred to...

Sunday June 28, 2009

Categories: A Sense of Place

Postcard from Pikes Peak

Greetings from the steps of the Agia Sophia Coffee Shop, at pretty much the foot of Pikes Peak. I came down here from my guesthouse to borrow some wifi (coffee shop is closed) so I could get directions to Holy...

Saturday June 27, 2009

Fertility & fidelity, marriage & congregations

David P. Goldman on marriage, reproduction and the survival of civilizations: Marriage as an institution that fulfills our nature: It is a holy estate that permits the mating pair of humans to embed their reproductive activity in the eschatological hope...

Saturday June 27, 2009

Categories: Culture

Michael Jackson: Art, not the artist

On the occasion of an artist's death, it's normal and even good to focus initially on the great things he accomplished. We've all been doing that ("we" = pop culture) in the days since Michael Jackson died. I was not...

Friday June 26, 2009

Categories: Culture

Jacko media trash-celebrity hathos-a-palooza!

A delicious e-mail from an Austin friend: Oh, this is just so wonderfully stink-stank-stunk craplicious! Makeshift memorials, middle-aged moonwalkers, breathless Larry King interviews with Cher and Celine Dion (barf!), Geraldo parading his man-crush (eyeew!), Elizabeth Taylor (isn't she dead yet?),...

Friday June 26, 2009

Categories: Culture

On finally encountering "Brave New World"

I can't believe I've gotten this far in life without reading Aldous Huxley's dystopian 1932 novel "Brave New World," but I have ... until today. I didn't read it, exactly, but I drove for hours today having it read to...

Friday June 26, 2009

Categories: A Sense of Place

The lonesome Texas Panhandle

Greetings from Amarillo. When I drove into town this evening, I passed by the Jesus Christ Is Lord Travel Center . Texas, man, ain't no place like it. Pulled over at a Holiday Inn off the Interstate. There was a...

Friday June 26, 2009

Categories: Family

A word about adultery

I've been thinking a lot over the past day about why I have such intensely strong emotional reactions to news about adultery, comparable to my fierce reactions to news about child abuse. It's perhaps a bit odd, because I grew...

Thursday June 25, 2009

Categories: Culture

Michael Jackson: He never had a chance

Via Andrew Sullivan, a 1984 Michael Kinsley piece about Michael Jackson at the peak of his stardom captures the essential tragedy of the man's life well. Excerpt: What's happened to Michael Jackson isn't too different from what they used to...

Thursday June 25, 2009

Categories: Sexuality

Cultural conservatives can't win

I wrote critically about Republican Gov. Mark Sanford's infidelity, and Ta-Nehisi Coates gets on me for being mean to Sanford, saying he doesn't really get why conservatives are so willing to be harsh to their own. Now, had I not...

Thursday June 25, 2009

Categories: Ave atque vale

Michael Jackson is dead

It was a heart attack, says TMZ. A stunner, simply a stunner. Jackson was without question one of the most important figures in popular music history, and to my mind, absolutely one of the saddest. Here's a lengthy critical appreciation...

Thursday June 25, 2009

Categories: Culture, Homosexuality

Disney: Hegemonic enemy of queer pedagogy

If, unlike me, you have a subscription to the academic journal Gender & Society, the publication of Sociologists for Women in Society, a feminist sociologist organization, you will no doubt already have read the paper decrying "Hetero-Romantic Love and Heterosexiness...

Thursday June 25, 2009

Categories: Culture

Beauty, the point of art (once)

Philosopher Roger Scruton: At any time between 1750 and 1930, if you had asked an educated person to describe the goal of poetry, art, or music, "beauty" would have been the answer. And if you had asked what the point...

Thursday June 25, 2009

Categories: Culture

Teaching and practicing gratitude

Wonderful Mark T. Mitchell essay about inculcating a sense of gratitude in children, and how difficult that is in contemporary America. Excerpts: Recently I was with a friend whose oldest son, having just completed his junior year, is home from...

Thursday June 25, 2009

Categories: Culture

The amazing Jacob Collins

We've had several threads this week about the meaning of art. Here's an encouraging one. Please go to the website of the New York painter Jacob Collins, and spend some time with his work. It's breathtaking. I'm most fond of...

Wednesday June 24, 2009

LSU Tigers win national championship!

Whipped Texas 11-4 in the deciding game of the College World Series. Much whooping and stomping around triumphantly in my house at this moment. Did I mention that Mrs. Dreher is a Texas alumna? Pray for her, the poor dear....

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Categories: Republicans

Mark Sanford's love letters

From one of his love letters to his Argentinian mistress: "One, tomorrow leave at 5 a.m. for New York and meetings. Will think about you on its streets and wish I was going to be there later in the month...

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Categories: Republicans

Mark Sanford blows himself up

You knew, you just knew, that there was some monkey business going on with South Carolina Gov. Mark Sanford and his mysterious Father's Day weekend disappearance, which turned out not to be a hiking trip on the Appalachian Trail, but...

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Yankee eats unhappily at Paula Deen's

I confess that I can't watch Paula Deen's cooking show. Too fakey-fake Southern for me. To my taste, she's the personification of the ersatz-country tchotchke room at Cracker Barrel. Well, a Yankee writing for The Atlantic moved to Savannah, went...

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Categories: A Sense of Place

Ord, Nebraska = Paradise?

One of Conor Friedersdorf's correspondents believes he may have found paradise in a tiny Nebraska town. Excerpt: For us in Nebraska, these attributes have immediate and powerful positive effects. Nebraska is the happiest and most contended state in the nation...

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Metropolitan Jonah: Goodbye TEC, hello ACNA

This week, a group of Anglican traditionalists who have broken away from the Episcopal Church have declared the Anglican Church in North America. Met. Jonah of the OCA (my church) is in the Dallas area today to address the ACNA...

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Categories: Culture

Shlock shock! Thomas Kinkade wasn't bad

If you've ever noticed the paintings of Thomas Kinkade, you've probably blanched at his sugarbomb shlock. He pretty much defines kitsch. And yet, as Joe Carter points out, to my great surprise, Kinkade used to be a pretty good artist....

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Categories: Barack Obama

Obama smokes. So what?

Barack Obama got testy yesterday in a press conference when asked about whether or not he still smokes. Yes, if you must know, he does. Excerpt: Between denouncing the crackdown on protests in Iran and explaining his health care plan...

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Categories: Food

Summer cocktails

The New York Times today publishes its guide to summer cocktails. I noticed just this morning that I have a couple of Texas peaches that need to be eaten today, so I'm going to make one of my habanero-fruit-ice blender...

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Categories: Healing

An acupuncture success story

A friend and reader of this blog writes with an encouraging story about acupuncture. I've slightly changed a couple of details to protect her identity, but I publish this with her permission: Last Thursday afternoon, I started suffering excruciating pain...

Wednesday June 24, 2009

Categories: Islamic terrorism

Our friends the terrorist-loving Saudis

Documents show the Saudi royal family gives wads of cash to al Qaeda. And the U.S. Government doesn't want you to know about it. Excerpt: The case has put the Obama administration in the middle of a political and legal...

Tuesday June 23, 2009

Categories: Culture of death

The social responsibility of artists

In the most recent Eminem thread, Nick the Greek said he doesn't want to live in a society in which artists are compelled to create only art that's safe for children if they are to be thought of as morally...

Tuesday June 23, 2009

Categories: A Sense of Place

Roadtrip to Colorado

As it turns out, I've got to make a roadtrip in a few days from Dallas to Manitou Springs, Colorado. I'll probably overnight in Amarillo, because I don't want to drive 14 hours straight through. Any suggestions for what I...

Tuesday June 23, 2009

Categories: Healing

Body, mind, and Chinese medicine

In his 1993 PBS series (and companion volume) "Healing and the Mind," Bill Moyers went to China with Dr. David Eisenberg of Harvard Medical School, who is trained in both Western and Chinese medicine. Here are a couple of interesting...

Tuesday June 23, 2009

Categories: Conservatism

Garry Wills on WFB

I like this Garry Wills remembrance of William F. Buckley, which appears in the current issue of The Atlantic. Wills, as a young man, was a National Review golden boy, but as he moved to the left, he and Buckley...

Tuesday June 23, 2009

Categories: Culture of death

Murder by Eminem, continued

Just read the long Eminem comments thread. A few remarks: 1. It seems clear now that the report that the Arizona killer quoted Eminem lyrics as he killed members of his family was not true. The lyrics are not from...

Tuesday June 23, 2009

Categories: Family, Media

Jon & Kate: media-age fools

The TV domestic-life exhibitionists Jon and Kate Gosselin are divorcing. What's more: Also surprising almost nobody, Jon and Kate Gosselin indicated that TLC reality show would continue to be taped. The fifth season premiere of the show last month drew...

Tuesday June 23, 2009

Categories: Culture, Islam

No burka for you, Mesdames

French President Nicolas Sarkozy says that there's no place in France for the burka. Excerpt: "In our country, we cannot accept that women be prisoners behind a screen, cut off from all social life, deprived of all identity," Sarkozy said...

Monday June 22, 2009

Categories: Culture of death

Murder by Eminem

Man in Arizona stabs his family to death, singing a line from the Cole Porter of our time as he carried out his homicidal act. Excerpt: Miller told detectives he was possessed and he visualized his wife, Adreana Miller, as...

Monday June 22, 2009

Categories: Varia

What is the meaning of enough?

Pete Peterson, on why he gave away a billion dollars to start a foundation dedicated to fighting for fiscal responsibility. Excerpt: Underlying these challenges is our broken political system. Our representatives, unlike our Founding Fathers, see politics as a career....

Sunday June 21, 2009

Stuff Christian Culture Likes

Actually, it's stuff white Evangelical Christian culture likes, but this website is still pretty funny and observant. Here's one entry on Bono: Men in Christian culture often have giant man-crushes on Bono. Pastors who wish to be emergent/relevant sometimes quote...

Sunday June 21, 2009

Categories: Iran

Neda: Face of a revolution?

Well, Khamenei and his bunch are in real trouble now. They've killed a young woman, and it was caught on video, and she has a name, and her name, allegedly, is Neda ("the calling"). They've made a martyr. Here is...

Sunday June 21, 2009

Categories: Iran

Picking sides in Iran

It's hard to read news accounts out of Iran -- like Roger Cohen's riveting tale in the NYT about being caught up in a Tehran demonstration -- without having one's heart leap in admiration of and support for the Iranian...

Saturday June 20, 2009

Categories: Food

Eat healthy, eat fresh, eat cheap

It has been asserted often here by commenters that eating fresh fruits and vegetables is simply too expensive for ordinary people. I thought about that last night when Julie and I sat down to dinner at home. We didn't have...

Saturday June 20, 2009

Against religion as a lifestyle accessory

In today's NYT, Peter Steinfels takes the upscale-sleazy women's fashion and lifestyle magazine Marie Claire to school for a feature about five materialist ding-dongs who are finding comfort in hard times from religion. It's completely understandable that people who had...

Friday June 19, 2009

Priest by day, drag queen by night

It seems that Ohio priest Father Anthony Capretta moonlights as a disco drag queen called Big Mama Capretta. Why anyone would think that this nitwit could offer serious spiritual direction is beyond me, but apparently some confused people do (check...

Friday June 19, 2009

Louisiana: It's not like America

A Baton Rouge friend e-mails today his thoughts about education and budgetary reform in Louisiana, and how our home state seems doomed to go through the same battles over and over again ... and make no progress. Depressing stuff, and...

Friday June 19, 2009

Categories: Healing, Orthodoxy

A theology of illness

I haven't been blogging much about my daily reading. Here's something I learned from a thin but profound book called "The Theology of Illness" by Jean-Claude Larchet, an Eastern Orthodox layman and philosophy teacher in a French school. Larchet makes...

Friday June 19, 2009

Categories: Britain

Europe and the far right

A friend and reader of this blog just returned from a trip to Greece and Italy. He writes that in all his years visiting the region, he has never seen it so tense. The sense of anger at immigrants, and...

Friday June 19, 2009

Categories: Conservatism

Why E.D. Kain is not a neoconservative

This makes a lot of sense to me, and I'm more or less where EDK is. The thing is, I have problems with the word "neoconservative," because the sentiments and policies and stances that typically get described as "neoconservative" really...

Friday June 19, 2009

Categories: Iran

On Iran, GOP leadership bankrupt

Daniel Larison speaks truth: One reason why Cantor and Pence have been demanding that the President take a stronger public line in support of the protesters in Iran is that supporting Mousavi's voters openly is the emotionally satisfying, easy, almost...

Friday June 19, 2009

Categories: Abortion

Killing your baby/Eliminating your fetus

Slate's William Saletan, who is pro-choice, fears that denying that what's growing inside of an expectant mother is human could lead to infanticide. Excerpt: If you talk to pregnant women or read accounts of what they say to friends and...

Friday June 19, 2009

Categories: Iran

The unrevolutionary Moussavi

Sorry to poop the party, but as Daniel Byman writes in Slate, Iran may be heading toward revolution, but Mir Hussein Moussavi is no revolutionary. Excerpt: Mousavi himself is likely to disappoint. A prime minister in the 1980s, when the...

Friday June 19, 2009

Categories: Barack Obama, Economics

Obama's puny financial reform plan

Simon Johnson says the fact that the big banks are happy with it tells you all you need to know about the administration's proposed regulatory overhaul of the financial system. Writes Johnson: There appears to be no mention that corporate...

Thursday June 18, 2009

Categories: Technology

On Iran's Twitter Revolution

Look, I love that the Iranian masses are using technology to thwart their corrupt and wicked regime. But I think we had better not make the old mistake that just because younger Iranians are fed up with their government and...

Thursday June 18, 2009

Categories: Agrariana, Food

Wendell Berry: "I'll go to jail over NAIS."

Food Renegade has an audio recording and the text of a recent set of public remarks at a federal "listening session" in which Wendell Berry vowed to go to jail if he has to in protest of the proposed National...

Thursday June 18, 2009

Categories: Architecture, Britain

Prince Charles vs. the Modernist Barbarians

Three cheers for Prince Charles, for effectively putting the kibosh on a hideous Modernist housing development planned for London. Charles is well-known for his strongly-held view that architectural modernism has in most cases been an anti-human blight on England. To...

Thursday June 18, 2009

Obama's realism on Iran

The Wall Street Journal thinks President Obama has been a lily-livered Carterite on the matter of the Iran protests. They would prefer that he denounced the Iranian regime's presumed theft of the election, and publicly side with the protesters. This...

Thursday June 18, 2009

Categories: Culture

Despicable animal rights loons

Longtime readers know that I am an advocate of animal welfare, as conceived by Matthew Scully in his magnificent book "Dominion"; I believe God calls us to exercise right stewardship over Nature, which includes the animals. We must not treat...

Wednesday June 17, 2009

Categories: Economics

The current Depression

Martin Wolf at Financial Times brings news of a new study showing that our economic recession is tracking the Great Depression -- and in at least one measure, is worse than the Great Depression was a year into that event....

Wednesday June 17, 2009

Categories: Conservatism

What is a conservative?

Conor Friedersdorf continues to struggle with right-wing heretic hunters, who seem to think that the first and last word in conservatism is a neo-liberal market fundamentalism. He asks them to explain exactly what they think a conservative is: Are there...

Wednesday June 17, 2009

Categories: Britain

The English ruling class at play

When I saw these pictures of last weekend's end-of-term revelry at Cambridge University, I thought their "Rod Dreher Has Gone Home" celebration had gotten a little out of hand, in the same sense that the Wehrmacht sort of lost its...

Tuesday June 16, 2009

Categories: Conservatism, Media

AmSpec on my "national socialism" jibe

Joseph Lawler at The American Spectator blog responds to my criticism of the magazine for touting a piece on Hitler's banker as "Obama's national socialism." Lawler: So is Dreher prepared to deride the work of Liaquat Ahamed, Adam Tooze, and...

Tuesday June 16, 2009

Recession lessons from W. Virginia

Don't buy what you don't need. Plant a garden. Can. More......

Tuesday June 16, 2009

Categories: Climate change

Climate change: Making your life worse

White House released today a new report on how climate change is going to affect the US. It's well worth reading. For instance, sometime this century, Illinois will have the climate of Texas. Let me tell you what you're in...

Tuesday June 16, 2009

Sex and poverty, morals and ministry

I had a couple of conversations in Cambridge that illuminated the challenges of being a Christian minister in this rapidly changing world. In the first, I spoke with an older Anglican priest (they're thick on the ground in Cambridge) who...

Tuesday June 16, 2009

Categories: Politics (general)

The useful barbarians

Speaking of the C.P. Cavafy poem "Waiting for the Barbarians" (read it on the jump below), it's helpful to read it and think about our current partisan political situation. The poem speaks about how useful it is to have a...

Tuesday June 16, 2009

Categories: Healing

Elusive silence, stillness, serenity

Between seminars in Cambridge last week, one of my journalist colleagues said to me that she was more or less fasting from reading blogs and news sites -- this, I was given to understand, as a way of staying focused...

Monday June 15, 2009

Categories: Housekeeping

Comments gone

Apparently a number of comments have disappeared late this evening. No idea what this is about. If they aren't restored by morning, I'll alert the web gremlins at Bnet. Sorry for the inconvenience. To the best of my knowledge, no...

Monday June 15, 2009

Categories: Culture

Japan's grass-eating sissy monkeys

Holy Hirohito, the Japanese male appears to have gone ultra-metrosexual. Excerpt: In Japan some call them herbivores, and on Saturday nights they come out to graze: a perfumed army of preening masculinity. Groomed and primped, hair teased to peacock-like perfection...

Monday June 15, 2009

Categories: Varia

The Templeton Fellow begins his work

Today was Day One of my research on my Templeton project on Orthodox theology, Chinese medicine and healing, and having reached the end of it, I can say without fear of contradiction that if anybody were to show up at...

Monday June 15, 2009

Eric Liddell and "Obama's national socialism"

Over dinner one night at Trinity College, Cambridge, I found myself talking politics with some of the Fellows. One asked me to what I attributed Obama's success so far. I told him that the lack of a credible alternative from...

Sunday June 14, 2009

Categories: A Sense of Place

Home

William F. Buckley was asked once what was his favorite journey. He answered simply, "Home." And so it is with me. I made it back to Dallas late yesterday afternoon after a long flight from Heathrow. Julie and the kids...

Friday June 12, 2009

Categories: Abortion

LeRoy Carhart, butcher

Our friend and faithful reader Alicia has said in comments in recent days that she strongly objects to pro-lifers calling the late Dr. Tiller "evil," on the grounds that to do that makes it easier for those inclined toward violence...

Thursday June 11, 2009

Categories: Britain

Drinking with British people

Had our farewell pints tonight at a Cambridge pub called The Pickerel Inn. To appease Alan Jacobs, I had a couple of pints of Old Peculier [sic] ("The power of Old Peculier should never be underestimated!" Too right). I...

Thursday June 11, 2009

Categories: Britain, Food

Chelsea buns and other English pastries

Just down the street from my hotel here in Cambridge is Fitzbillies, a well-known Cambridge bakery. One of their specialties is the Chelsea bun. It's like a cinnamon roll on steroids. I was told I needed to try one, so...

Thursday June 11, 2009

Categories: Liberalism

Ta-Nehisi on conservatism

Reader Helen asked me to take a look at Ta-Nehisi Coates' post explaining why he's not a conservative. Here's the gist of it: I think about the terror that fell upon black communities in the South, after the Civil War,...

Thursday June 11, 2009

Categories: Liberalism

Working class moves far right

Lots of pearls-clutching in the UK right now over the election the other day of two members of the far-right British National Party to the European parliament. The BNP drew its support not from disaffected Tory voters, but from working-class...

Wednesday June 10, 2009

Categories: Britain

English pubs

I've been fortunate on this trip to have spent some time inside the bosom of Mother England herself. I speak, of course, of English pubs, the old-style ones, which really are a wonder. The other day, knocking around London...

Wednesday June 10, 2009

Categories: Healing, Orthodoxy

Orthodoxy and Chinese medicine

(For those who've asked, and who have been kind enough to offer prayers and good wishes, I'm feeling much better today, and I think the shingles danger has passed. The expected rash hasn't materialized, and the painful areas on my...

Wednesday June 10, 2009

Categories: Atheism

John Gray on types of atheism

Wonderful session with John Gray yesterday here in Cambridge; it was only a pity that he had to leave as soon as it was over, and we couldn't spend more time with him. Gray, a political philosopher and a self-described...

Wednesday June 10, 2009

Categories: Britain, Culture, Food

The English constitution

At the risk of making an utterly banal point, and eliciting howls from the Laird his own badass self, I have to say that I have been impressed, if that is the word, with the heroic constitution of my British...

Tuesday June 9, 2009

Categories: Orthodoxy

Baptist meets Byzantium

A Baptist preacher in San Antonio takes his wife and kids to visit an Orthodox liturgy. It was sensually overwhelming, confusing and exhausting for the man and his family. Sounds unpleasant, right?: I LOVED IT. Loved it loved it loved...

Tuesday June 9, 2009

St. Etheldreda

She was an early medieval East Anglian princess who became an abbess only after an extraordinary series of trials. See here. What an extraordinary story -- and she is a saint for the Orthodox too, of course. In fact, the...

Monday June 8, 2009

Categories: Varia

Too danged yanged

So, I changed my plane ticket to return home this coming Saturday, instead of making my monastery pilgrimage, anticipating that I might be dealing with an onset of shingles by the weekend. I'm trying to figure out if I should...

Monday June 8, 2009

Categories: Culture

On outing anonymous bloggers

I mostly agree with Conor on the matter of Ed Whelan's outing of Publius, the Obsidian Wings blogger. Blogging anonymously is morally problematic; being anonymous gives one license to say things about others that one would not say if one...

Monday June 8, 2009

Science as religion

Without question, the best thing that's happened to me being here is being introduced to the thought and writing of John Gray, the British political philosopher. I can't think of anyone like him in the US. He is a secular...

Sunday June 7, 2009

Categories: Culture, Science

Darwin, science and culture

On Friday here at the Templeton fellowship conference, we had a terrific session with Dame Gillian Beer, who lectured on how Darwin's work was interpreted by Victorian literary and popular culture. This served as a springboard for a broader discussion...

Sunday June 7, 2009

Categories: Britain, Decline and fall

Anger and British culture

I spent some great time this afternoon in a pub with an American doctoral student I've met. We talked for a bit about the political crisis in the UK now, with Prime Minister Gordon Brown hanging on by a thread....

Sunday June 7, 2009

Categories: Churchgoing

Bad kids in church

Woke up this morning to a beautiful cold, gray, rainy day. I'm not kidding: this is beautiful to me. I love melancholy weather, and melancholy moods. Walked to liturgy this morning, and found an oasis of warmth, both spiritual and...

Saturday June 6, 2009

Categories: Varia

Horrible London hipster hair trend

Well, I've been down to London for a bit, and I am here to warn you about a catastrophic facial hair trend that is no doubt coming our way. Maybe it's a steampunk thing, but the kids these days are...

Friday June 5, 2009

Categories: Sexuality

David Carradine and autoerotic lunacy

This just in: Kung Fu star David Carradine might have died after an auto-erotic asphyxiation game went wrong, according to police. The 72-year-old was found dead by a maid in a Bangkok hotel room on Thursday. He was discovered hanging...

Thursday June 4, 2009

Categories: A Sense of Place

The heart of Englishness

Behold, varlets, I have this evening penetrated the very heart of Englishness. Through the generosity of an old friend who is a Fellow of Trinity College, the largest and most prestigious of the Cambridge colleges, Your Working Boy had dinner...

Thursday June 4, 2009

Categories: Abortion

Franky Schaeffer's indulgent agony

Reading John Zmirak's lively and intelligent reflection on the Tiller murder today -- especially his argument that the Tiller murder was wrong not because the use of violence is wrong per se, but because it's an act of war carried...

Wednesday June 3, 2009

Categories: Varia

Old Jew tells fart joke, makes crunchy goy happy

I ask you, has there ever been a better use for the Internet than the site Old Jews Telling Jokes? I love this one:...

Wednesday June 3, 2009

Categories: Science

Does biological life have a purpose?

That was the fundamental question raised by this morning's lecture from Simon Conway Morris, a Cambridge professor of evolutionary paleobiology. To cut to the chase: he didn't answer it definitively, because, he says, we don't have the evidence to draw...

Tuesday June 2, 2009

Categories: Abortion

Boston Episcopalians celebrate Tiller's life, work

The Episcopal Church, at it again: Dr. Tiller was shot and killed Sunday morning while serving as an usher at his church in Witchita, Kansas. Since the 1970s, Dr. Tiller has provided critical abortion and reproductive health care at great...

Tuesday June 2, 2009

Categories: Abortion

Abortion violence statistics

How many people have been killed in anti-abortion violence in the US? From the BBC, citing abortion provider statistics: According to data gathered by the National Abortion Federation, a pro-choice group, there had been at least nine killings in anti-abortion...

Tuesday June 2, 2009

Julie Lyons' "Holy Roller" -- CC interview

Hey y'all, I'm in Cambridge today, but I'm posting this to the site on last Friday -- through the magic of Movable Type software, I can paste this in and schedule it to post in days to come. Woo. Today...

Tuesday June 2, 2009

Categories: Culture, Education

Soft bigotry of high expectations

My final newspaper column until August is in praise of Matthew B. Crawford's new book, "Shop Class as Soulcraft." Excerpt: As the cost of a college degree spirals upward, The Chronicle of Higher Education anticipates that fewer young Americans will...

Tuesday June 2, 2009

Categories: Economics

GM: This will not end well. Or at all.

Extremely depressing, but undoubtedly realistic, David Brooks column this morning, about the quagmire that is General Motors. Excerpt: As a result, G.M. has steadily lost U.S. market share, from 54 to 19 percent. Consumer Reports now recommends 70 percent of...

Monday June 1, 2009

Categories: Science

Simplicity, complexity and equilibrium

The second lecture today in Cambridge was from the cosmologist John D. Barrow, winner of the 2006 Templeton Prize. He spoke about simplicity and complexity in science, and the conflict between them. Barrow said that physicists deal in fundamental laws,...

Monday June 1, 2009

The ideological uses of science

This morning at Templeton-Cambridge, we heard a fascinating lecture by Dr. Denis Alexander, a prominent Cambridge biochemist, on the history of science in the West. The main point was that the idea that science and religion are in irresolvable conflict...

Monday June 1, 2009

Categories: Abortion

Tiller and the logic of the pro-life position

Damon Linker asks an important and reasonable question: If abortion truly is what the pro-life movement says it is -- if it is the infliction of deadly violence against an innocent and defenseless human being -- then doesn't morality demand...

Monday June 1, 2009

Categories: Abortion, Culture

Tiller, language and violence

Unsurprisingly, on this blog's comboxes and elsewhere, some are blaming the entire pro-life movement for Tiller's murder, and blaming specifically pro-life rhetoric for supposedly inciting the abortion doc's murderer. There's not much point in objecting to this at this point;...

Monday June 1, 2009

Categories: War

North Korea jitters

Oh, this is just lovely, innit?: North Korea is bolstering its coastal defenses and preparing to launch another long-range missile, believed to be capable of reaching Alaska, from a new base on its west coast, reports said Monday. South Korean...

Monday June 1, 2009

Categories: Culture

John Gray

One of our speakers this first term at the Templeton Cambridge fellowship will be the philosopher John Gray. I was impressed by the critical Gray essay on the New Atheists ("secular fundamentalists" he calls them, though he himself, I was...

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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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