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"I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate."
--Romans 7:15 (RSV)



Catholics Against Rudy

Main

May 8, 2008

WE WIN!!

This Day in History 1945: V-E Day is celebrated in American and Britain

On this day in 1945, both Great Britain and the United States celebrate Victory in Europe Day. Cities in both nations, as well as formerly occupied cities in Western Europe, put out flags and banners, rejoicing in the defeat of the Nazi war machine.

It was a long, hard-fought victory. At times it seemed foolish to continue to fight, but we fought and prevailed against one of the greatest evils this world has ever seen.

Of course, had today's Democrats been around back then, the Nazis would likely control mainland Europe and be executing any remaining Jews in their concentration camps. The war was really hard and saving Europe just wasn't worth the effort and doomed to failure anyway and we had a Depression going on. It would have been foolish to fight such an impressive military as the Nazis had. And fighting them just created more Nazis anyway.

UPDATE: Here's the image I was thinking of when I chose the headline:

From the opening credits of the greatest sitcom of the 80s, Cheers. Although, I'm not 100% it actually refers to V-E Day. It might be V-J.

UPDATE 2: It's neither V-E or V-J Days. According to IMDB, it refers to the end of Prohibition. Who'da thunk it?

April 25, 2008

This Day in Delaware History

1951 After being delayed because somebody stole it, the cornerstone for the new state police Penny Hill station was finally laid by Governor Elbert Carvel.

That makes me laugh.

April 3, 2008

This is kind of cool

This Day in Delaware History: 1731 James Nixon, great-great-great-great-grandfather of President Richard Nixon, bought a 100 acre farm in Brandywine Hundred. His other great-great-great- great-grandfather Thomas Milhous lived 9 miles away just over the line in Chester County, Pennsylvania.

March 4, 2008

Big Day in US History

Today in 1789, the 1st Congress was seated.

That was made possible by the taking of Dorcester Heights on this date in 1776 which drove the British out of Boston which they had occupied for a while trying to repress the brewing rebellion.

In addition, other than Washington's first inauguration and Presidents sworn in following the death of their predecessor, every President up to and including FDR was sworn in on this date.

And on a lighter note, Ronald and Nancy Reagan married on this date in 1951.

Thank God for Science: How Medieval Churchmen Gave Us the Experimental Method

On Monday, March 10, 2008 at 115 Purnell Hall, University of Delaware, Professor Michael W. Tkacz will kick off the Catholics in Science Symposium with a talk that explodes the misconception that science and the Christian Church are at odds. Dr. Tkacz is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Gonzaga University.

This talk is free and open to all. It runs from 7-9pm. Refreshments will be served.

Science and Christianity have always been at war, right?

Wrong! Scholastic philosophers of the medieval universities originated the mathematical & experimental methods associated with modern science.

Modern science arose out of the rejection of scholasticism & medieval Christian culture, correct?

Wrong again!

The historical evidence supports a very different view of the origins of scientific research. The Christian theologians & natural philosophers of the early universities initiated the historically continuous tradition of scientific investigation that continues today.

Only when the bonds of authoritarian religion were loosed was the free-thinking necessary for scientific progress possible Surely that truism is correct?

Wrong, wrong, wrong!

The contributions of churchmen are so significant that one may rightly say that the scientific revolution took place, not in the seventeenth century—the time of Galileo—as commonly thought, but in the thirteenth century—the time of Thomas Aquinas.

A look at some of the experimental efforts of medieval thinkers will reveal a forgotten early chapter in the history of science. It will also reveal the close association of the Christian faith & the scientific spirit.

For additional information, contact Kate Rogers at 302-831-8480 or krogers@udel.edu. This event is sponsored by the Department of Philosophy, Students of Western Civilization, and the Catholic Scholars of Delaware.

Looks like a great event and a way to remind us that one of the best things ever to happen to science was the Catholic Church.

March 2, 2008

Book Review: Liberal Fascism

I finally finished this book, after having started it back in January. A combination of being really busy and a brief illness kept me from devoting as much attention as I would have liked.

Even had I had more time to devote to it, it still would have taken me a while to read; it's over 400 pages plus 60 pages of footnotes and is a very thought-provoking book, requiring much reflection and pondering of its many points. It shatters many commonly held myths about the historical Left and Right.

The book had its genesis in the frequent attacks upon himself in particular, and conservatives in general, where members of the Left would attack conservative views and policies as "fascist," and consider the argument over. Goldberg, like most students of history, knew these claims to be false as Fascism was virtually always a product of the Left. After all, if one philosophy holds for smaller, less intrusive government, while another calls for greater government control over virtually all facets of life which one is more fascistic? The one calling for larger government, of course, and yet it is the liberals, who subscribe to that point of view, who call conservatives fascistic. I believe it's for this reason this book had never been written before: liberals didn't know better and conservatives knew the charge was ridiculous and considered it unworthy of a response. Goldberg decided enough was enough and wrote a book that should, once and for all, demolish the association of Fascism and the Right.

He begins with a forward titled "Everything you know about Fascism is wrong" wherein he exposes the falsity of the association of the Right and the Fascists. He then continues with a chapter each focusing on Mussolini and Hitler, showing that their political roots lay in their nations' respective Left. He shows that the hatred between Communists and Fascists lay not in their political opposition, but in the fact they were fighting over the same political turf: the Left. (Think of how much many Republicans hate John McCain, for example, even though he agrees with him so often. Ann Coulter dislikes him so much she'd promised that she'd support Hillary Clinton over McCain, despite the many disagreements between the two blondes. We get angrier with those we expect to agree with us than those who we write off. Just like no one can make us as angry as those we truly love.) He also makes a point to define Fascism before beginning his discussion of its history: "Fascism is a religion of the state." The belief that "salvation" will come through a large, interventionist government that will remake society, and Man himself, for the better is the essence of Fascism.

Goldberg then takes us through American history showing development of Fascist thought and practice in our own nation. He points out that although it's often claimed it could never happen here, it, in fact, already has. Perhaps the most Fascistic President of all was Woodrow Wilson how centralized power, jailed political opponents and increased governmental involvement in the economy to previously unimagined dimensions. (A recurrent theme in this book is that American Progressivism is really just Fascism with a smile. Rather than imposing their will on the people, Progressives claim to be doing what's best for the people.)

The early 1920s did much to reduce the size and breadth of government, but that trend was reversed with the election of Herbert Hoover as President. Despite his portrayal as a typical laissez-faire President, he was actually a strongly interventionist President, as he had been in every public office he had held going back to the Wilson Administration. So, in the true history, there was a change only in degree, not in kind, with the election of Franklin Roosevelt, who may have been even more of a Fascist than Wilson. Both viewed their program in militaristic terms. Roosevelt created the National Recovery Administration, which determined what businesses could charge for their products and pay their employees. Businesses who did not comply were branded unpatriotic and even charged with crimes. (Declaring businesses "unpatriotic" is part of Obama's economic platform today.) Goldberg quotes many European Fascists admiring FDR's accomplishments and even expressing some envy at what he was able to accomplish.

He continues through American history with the 60s Hippie movement, which with its violence and attempts to overthrow the existing order, both political and moral, really does recall the early years of the Nazi movement in Germany. Fortunately, America didn't fall under the sway of such leaders as Germany did. (Another point for the Founding Fathers who prevented swift change the way the drafters of Germany's post World War I constitution did not.)

The weakest part of the book, in my opinion, dealt with Kennedy and LBJ. While he validly points out that Kennedy, as many actual Fascists did, used supposed emergencies to garner support for their policies, this was more, as Goldberg acknowledges, due to his need to have an emergency to focus on than an real attempt to centralize government power. Similarly, while LBJ did have some Fascist tendencies, I wouldn't include him as a Fascist either.

He continues on with a chapter on how the Left uses race as a means to achieve their goals, while attempting to cover up the fact that eugenics, which sought to breed out the weaker races, was a phenomenon of the Left. It was the Right, and especially Catholics, who opposed forced sterilization of blacks and the mentally handicapped. Margaret Sanger was clearly a person of the Left and an active proponent of reducing, if not completely eliminating, the black population. (Interestingly, that racism is still apparently extant in Planned Parenthood today.)

Economics is another area where conservatism and leftist views are confused. It's commonly assumed that conservatives being pro-business, are inherently Fascistic in their desire to help business. In fact, the historical record shows, it is largely the Left who has promoted government-business partnerships in order to increase the cohesion of society and unite it behind their view of how society should be. Again, it's the Left and their interventionist economic policies who are more Fascistic than the Right.

He devotes a chapter to Hillary Clinton, who I had never bothered to read too much about and shows how from the 60s, she's been interested in remaking society and overturning many long held beliefs. He concludes the book with a chapter showing how many things commonly held in our society were first promoted, or first widely promoted by the Nazis, such as the "natural food" movement, environmentalism, anti-smoking laws, among others. He doesn't deride all of these things as wrong in and of themselves; in fact, he shops at Whole Foods frequently himself. However, he does point out that the desire to make things that are personal preferences or opinions mandatory does match the Fascist tendency perfectly.

He finished with an afterword discussing the dangers conservatives face that could draw them into Fascism. He uses Pat Buchanan as an example of a conservative who did become a Fascist. (Fortunately, the conservative movement has written Buchanan out of it in an October 1999 article in National Review. Another example of conservatives kicking extremists out of their movement, a step liberals seem reluctant, at best, to take.) He admits that, in many ways, President Bush does have some Fascistic tendencies, but they are largely in areas that the Left would agree with: the expansion of Medicare and the notion that government has to move when people are in trouble just to name two examples.)

This was an excellent book and one that anyone interested in political discourse should read to clear up a commonly held misconception. It will teach you a lot about history, exposing some myths that have, unfortunately, taken hold in our society and show that the real danger of Fascism comes from those most likely to cry Fascism.

March 1, 2008

How the Right Marginalized the John Birch Society

Time was given to the John Birch Society lasting through lunch, and the subject came up again the next morning. We resolved that conservative leaders should do something about the John Birch Society. An allocation of responsibilities crystallized.

Goldwater would seek out an opportunity to dissociate himself from the "findings" of the Society's leader, without, however, casting any aspersions on the Society itself. I, in National Review and in my other writing, would continue to expose Welch and his thinking to scorn and derision. "You know how to do that," said Jay Hall.

I volunteered to go further. Unless Welch himself disowned his operative fallacy, National Review would oppose any support for the society.

"How would you define the Birch fallacy?" Jay Hall asked.

"The fallacy," I said, "is the assumption that you can infer subjective intention from objective consequence: we lost China to the Communists, therefore the President of the United States and the Secretary of State wished China to go to the Communists."

"I like that," Goldwater said.

What would Russell Kirk do? He was straightforward. "Me? I'll just say, if anybody gets around to asking me, that the guy is loony and should be put away."

"Put away in Alaska?" I asked, mock-seriously. The wisecrack traced to Robert Welch's expressed conviction, a year or so earlier, that the state of Alaska was being prepared to house anyone who doubted his doctrine that fluoridated water was a Communist-backed plot to weaken the minds of the American public.

Read the whole thing

There were a few attempts to recruit me into the Birch society in my younger days. I "forgot" to respond to those attempts. The marginalization of the Birchers is just one of the many good deeds Bill Buckley did for our country.

Now, if only the Left would act similarly towards their lunatic fringe, instead of embracing them.

February 18, 2008

Washington's Birthday (Observed)

Richard Brookhiser tells a nice story:

Washington also knew how to handle his friends, sometimes a harder task. By the time he retired, he had become convinced that Thomas Jefferson and his friends would drive America off a cliff if they ever came to power. But Jefferson, then vice president, was the darling of Virginia. Washington tried to encourage Virginians who shared his views to run for office. One of the men he thought of was John Marshall, a bright Richmond lawyer who had served under him as a captain in the Revolution.


Washington invited Marshall to Mount Vernon in 1799 to make his pitch. Marshall idolized Washington, but he wanted to make money, and tried to beg off. Washington would not let him. Marshall finally concluded that he would have to escape from Mount Vernon at day break. He found when he got up, however, that Washington had gotten up earlier, and donned his Revolutionary uniform. Marshall obeyed orders, and began the career that would make him, in less than two years, chief justice.

Why Washington is not just the greatest President, but perhaps the greatest American, ever: he resigned.

Consider all the times that Washington put service before self.

In 1775, when he accepted command of the Continental Army, he promised Congress that he would resign his commission when the war was over. Once the British withdrew, he was true to his word, and surrendered command of an army fiercely loyal to him. In a moving scene before Congress on December 23, 1783 (then assembled in Annapolis, Maryland), Washington pledged loyalty to the civilian government he had served. He thereby established the principle that our nation’s military would always be under civilian rule.

Earlier in the 1780s, Washington had been approached twice by army officers who promised their support if he decided to seize civilian power. In one famous incident in 1782, Col. Lewis Nicola wrote a letter urging Washington to overthrow Congress and become America’s king. The commanding general scolded Nicola the very same day.

In 1783, Washington caught wind of officers wanting to stage a coup d’état against Congress. The so-called Newburgh Conspirators were frustrated that Congress was not paying them what had been promised when the nation desperately needed their sacrifice. Washington would not be moved — that die would not be cast. On the Ides of March, he called the men together and sternly reprimanded them for losing faith in the idea of America. The new nation had a chance to succeed only if its leaders and military adhered to the rule of law.

When King George III heard that Washington would resign his commission to a powerless Congress, he told the painter Benjamin West: “If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world.”

Washington returned home to Mount Vernon in December 1783. Like Cincinnatus, he put down his sword and took up his plow, making him the most trusted man in America. Delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1787 selected him to be their president, knowing he would not abuse his position to aggrandize himself. And a grateful nation unanimously elected him president of the United States in 1789 and again in 1792, because they knew he would devote all his energies to serving the new nation.

Washington, when convinced that he had done all he could to help the country, retired after two terms as president. True to principle, he relinquished the power that was his for the taking. It was an example of selfless leadership that inspires Americans and the world to this day. Why don’t more American children know that?

George Washington, the indispensible man, without whomo we would not have a country. Let's make sure to remember that although many call this "President's Day," it really should be honored as Washington's Birthday.

February 6, 2008

The Politics of History

The Politics of History - WSJ.com

This episode reminded me of an inquiry posed last fall by a respected public radio producer. After interviewing me for a program on campaign history, he asked me to suggest prominent Democrats who might comment for the show. He wanted the views of a few politicians to compliment those of historians, but he could only think of Republicans who knew much about history.

Having once worked for Congress, I started running through its members in my head. Various Republicans sprang to mind, but no living Democrats. Finally I hit on former Sen. George McGovern as probable and a couple of others as possible, but it was tough.

A few days later a journalist asked me this question: Why do conservatives like history more than liberals? Most historians vote Democratic, I assured him, but I realized that there might be something to his query. The current Republican candidates for president often refer to past presidents from both parties, he noted, while the Democratic candidates rarely do. (Barack Obama has expressed admiration for Illinois Republican Abraham Lincoln and the inspirational leadership of John F. Kennedy.)

The author then continues on to discuss how the Democrats are likely embarrassed by their "ancestors," to a greater extent than Republicans are. He cites: Jefferson was a slaveholders; Jackson was as well, plus a murderer; William Jennings Bryan fought the teaching of evolution; Woodrow Wilson was a racist and a fascist; FDR put Japanese Americans into prison camps; LBJ brought the Great Society, but also the Vietnam War. In addition, I'd add the indisputable fact that the Democrat Party was the party of slavery and segregation.

But Republicans, and conservatives, also have skeletons in their closets, or given the history at question, crazy uncles in the attic might be a better analogy. Why are they less embarrassed at their history and more likely to draw lessons from it? (Conservatives even cite John C. Calhoun favorably, and he was certainly pro-slavery.)

Why the difference? I think it comes from the implicit assumption in all conservative thought that people are, by nature, imperfect. We all have flaws, and once we accept that about ourselves, we become more tolerant of flaws in others. So, we can draw political lessons from a Calhoun or a Jefferson, and ignore them where they seem to be wrong. It seems that one of two impulses drives liberals: they either believe people to be perfect, only to be dragged down by a corrupt society, or essentially flawed, and therefore need the guidance of an elite who will steer them in the proper direction, against their will, if necessary. Conservatives, recognizing the essential, but incomplete, goodness of people, resists a concentration of power, lest that power tend to corrupt, as Lord Acton so cogently warned us.

There are other factors that I believe tend to diminish a liberal's interest in history. One, liberals, believing they know how best to order society, are less likely to be interested in other opinions about how to do so, so feel less need to learn from the mistakes and successes of the past. Conservatives, on the contrary, recognizing the organic nature of any culture, believe we must know where we come from, lest proposed changes take us in a completely new direction that people are not ready for. As an analogy, we can't go straight from Nevada to New Jersey; there are many states in between. Many non-conservatives, since anyone of an ideological bent can be guilty of this rashness and radicalism, would have us attempt to skip those intermediate states and cause much disruption and error.

Additionally, as my cousin-in-law, a former liberal, told me: study of history, especially American history, tends to make one conservative. The allegedly soon to be beatified and convert to Catholicism Cardinal John Henry Newman told us "To be steeped in history is to cease being Protestant," the same is often true of ceasing to be liberal.

It's not the Economy, Stupid

Robert J. Samuelson - Why It's Not The Economy - washingtonpost.com

We have a $14 trillion economy. The idea that presidents can control it lies between an exaggeration and an illusion. Our presidential preferences ought to reflect judgments about candidates' character, values, competence and their views on issues where what they think counts: foreign policy; long-term economic and social policy -- how they would tax and spend; health care; immigration. Forget the business cycle.

...
Sensible voters should look beyond the cheery or dreary economy of the moment. They should recognize that if presidents could control the business cycle, recessions would never occur, there would always be "full employment" and inflation would remain forever tame. Instead of judging prospective presidents on what they can't do, voters ought to concentrate on what they can do. There are plenty of real differences among the remaining candidates. But Carville is probably right. For many, it will be the economy, and it will be stupid.

The President's power to influence the economy, for good or for ill, is overrated. The Federal Reserve Chairman has much more influence, as noted in the article. Other issues, beyond the economy, should take precedence when deciding how to vote for President.

February 4, 2008

We've lost two heroes recently

The last remaining Marine from the iconic photo of raising the flag over Iwo Jima died on January 29th.

We also lost Bertram James on January 18th. James was one of the last remaining survivors of "The Great Escape" captured memorably in film. (The book is even better and shows how truly difficult the plan was. If you're interested in it at all, you've got to read this book.)

Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and through the mercy of God, may their souls and all the souls of the faithful departed rest in peace.

Today in History: George Washington elected unanimously (twice!)

This Day in History 1789: Washington unanimously elected by Electoral College to first and second terms

I went down to Mount Vernon this Saturday with my father, his first time since they added the new education center and museum. The main impetus for the trip was the basement of the house being opened to the public for the first time in years. While not thrilling in and of itself, it was still cool to see. They are a bit into the hero worship even lauding his military skills. He wasn't much of a tactician, but his understanding of how the population would react to the means of war and the proper overarching strategy were exactly right, after some early missteps. When it came time for battle, though, he should leave such decisions to other people.

Still, he's clearly the greatest American and most important figure in our nation's history. Mount Vernon's well worth the trip; if you get the chance, go. (And even if you can't go, support them in their work remembering our first, and greatest, President.)

January 31, 2008

This Day in Delaware History

1927 - Time magazine, with Pierre S. du Pont, II, featured on its cover, reported that he had already spent $5 million on Delaware schools. He was also credited with building 89 schools for African American children, when the state would not.

Delawareans should never forget the deep debt of gratitude we owe to the generosity of the du Pont family over many years. They've done more for us than we remember and they deserve better from us.

January 29, 2008

Lincoln vs. Wilson (and Bush)

Jonah Goldberg discusses Abraham Lincoln and Woodrow Wilson as fascists. His conclusion: Lincoln no, because the times required it due to the war; Wilson, yes, because he was undertaking such steps even while we were at peace.

It's commonly accepted that Lincoln often functioned more as a dictator than as a President, but that was justifiable as we were in a war the likes of which we had never seen, before or since. Wilson centralized and empowered government because he wanted to be powerful. Very different impulses were at work. It's a question that had occurred to me while reading Liberal Fascism. Goldberg, in the book, does point out that Wilson was an admirer of Lincoln's accomplishments in centralizing government, while objecting to the reason. (Wilson was no supporter of racial equality.) Lincoln, while believing in a stronger central government as a rule, likely would have blanched at some of the steps Wilson took in peacetime. Wilson then did become effectively a dictator during World War I. It's this we often forget about when looking back on that time. Harding's campaign slogan ("A Return to Normalcy," containing one of my favorite invented words) was not just a call to get back to America's historic detachment from world affairs, but also a call to end arrests for political activism, suppression of dissent. All the things the Left like to pretend Bush is doing now, Wilson was doing back then. (In many ways they share some faults, though: Bush certainly seems to have a Wilsonian views of world affairs. Wilson went to war to make the world safe for democracy; Bush went to war, at least in part, to promote democracy.)

I'm still working my way through Liberal Fascism, and while I don't agree with every point, I've certainly learned a lot about history. (All that stuff about Wilson was really enlightening.) It's definitely worth your time reading.

January 21, 2008

Hitler: Bloodthirsty Dictator, Die-hard Cowboys Fan

YouTube - Hitler: Bloodthirsty Dictator, Die-hard Cowboys Fan

I knew it!

January 3, 2008

This Day in History 1861: Delaware rejects secession

This Day in History 1861: Delaware rejects secession

Just two weeks after South Carolina became the first state to secede from the Union, the state of Delaware rejects a similar proposal.

There had been little doubt that Delaware would remain with the North. Delaware was technically a slave state, but the institution was rare by 1861. There were 20,000 blacks living there, but only 1,800 of them were slaves--Delaware was industrializing, and most of the commercial ties were with Pennsylvania. In 1790, 15 percent of Delaware's population was enslaved, but by 1850 that figure had dropped to less than three percent. In the state's largest city, Wilmington, there were only four bondsmen. Most of the slaves were concentrated in Sussex, the southernmost of the state's three counties.

After South Carolina ratified the ordinance of secession on December 20, 1860, other states considered similar proposals. Although there were some Southern sympathizers, Delaware had a Unionist governor and the legislature was dominated by Unionists. On January 3, the legislature voted overwhelmingly to remain with the United States. For the Union, Delaware's decision was only a temporary respite from the parade of seceding states. Over the next several weeks, six states joined South Carolina in seceding; four more left after the South captured Fort Sumter in April 1861.

What I found strange is that Delaware's "This Day in Delaware History" email didn't mention this, but did mention that Generals Grant and Sheridan attended a wedding on this date in 1866. Priorities, people! (By coincidence, some good friends of mine are descendants of General Sheridan, although, they're apparently a little embarrassed about it due to some of tactics he used in prosecuting the war. Having discussed that with people who know far more about the Civil War, they shouldn't be embarrassed by anything he did.)

January 1, 2008

Book Review: My Grandfather's Son by Clarence Thomas

Taking it easy today, I read Clarence Thomas' memoir My Grandfather's Son, which covers the time period from his early childhood until his swearing-in as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. He describes his journey from poverty in Georgia to becoming a radical while in college and law school to returning to the conservative roots of his grandfather, who raised him from his youth.

Much of the book is taken up with incidents showing the lack of respect most liberals have for blacks, while claiming to be their stalwart supporters. His philosophy that blacks can succeed through hard work and taking responsibility for themselves drew harsh reactions from liberals throughout his career, even leading other blacks to shun him for his views. He was reminded time and again that liberals are fine with blacks who mind their place on the liberal plantation.

While reading his first experiences of this sort, I was attributing it to liberal racism which Thomas notes he experiences much more frequently than racism from conservatives, although conservatives aren't completely innocent in that area either. But upon further reflection, I realized that it's not necessarily racism, although racism and condescension towards blacks does inform much of the liberal view on race relations; rather, it's arrogance. We see it all the time from liberals as they attack those who disagree, no matter their skin color.

It's sadly infrequent that you hear a liberal discuss an opponent's arguments any more; instead they fall back on ad hominem attacks attacking a person's character or intelligence. Sometimes this is because they lack any ability to argue a position on its merits (think of a local blog with the initials "D.L."), but other times it's because they are so convinced of their own righteousness and brilliance that anyone who disagree with them is, ipso facto, corrupt or stupid. The possibility that a person can, in good and informed conscience, disagree with them is incomprehensible to them. I think, in some respects, this informs their philosophy of top-down, controlling government; they're so sure of the merits of their position that they are willing to impose it on all, regardless of the merits of any arguments against their proposals. It's why I'm especially looking forward to Jonah Goldberg's upcoming book Liberal Fascism. (already pre-ordered from Amazon!). The seal with which the Left seeks to impose their "solutions" on people does bring to mind the zeal with which Fascists would impose their will on their subjects.

Thomas does share his opinions of those who he came into contact with in his sojourn through Washington. Many unnamed Reagan Administration officials come off badly as they seemed to care little about improving the state of blacks in America. Reagan himself comes off favorably as Thomas records the sincere hurt that Reagan felt over the accusations of racism thrown his way by those who disagreed with his policies. (See above paragraph.) Thomas similarly has glowing remarks about the first president Bush, describing him as a man of honor and decency. Our own Senator Biden comes off as a self-seeking liar, while he does have warm comments for Ruth Bader Ginsburg, his college on the DC bench and later (although not discussed in this book) on the Supreme Court., among many other Democrats. (My favorite comment about a Democrat was when Thomas relates that Gore said he would vote to confirm Thomas if Gore decided not to run for President, otherwise he would vote no. While acknowledging the political calculation and lack of conviction behind such a statement, Thomas grudgingly admired the honesty, especially compared to some of the clear dissembling by some of the other members of the Senate Judiciary Committee.) He has nothing but praise for Jack Danforth, who gave him his first job out of law school, sought him out to bring Thomas to Washington upon Danforth's election as Senator and stood by him through the "high-tech lynching" of his nomination to the Supreme Court. Without my going into the deeper details, he describes Anita Hill an ambitious, but lackluster employee, who turned out also to be a liar.

Definitely worth a read if you want to get a sense of the man. (Hube might be interested in his comments on education policy during his time at the Department of Education.) I was disappointed to see he didn't cover his time on the Supreme Court, but I guess that's understandable since he's still there. (It's especially disappointing since it didn't cover his return to the Catholicism of his youth after joining the Court.) It's a quick read, I started it after 9 this morning and finished it by 3:30 or maybe earlier. And that includes making my self some lunch, taking a shower, etc. It's worth the read.

December 26, 2007

Primary Schedule

One of my Christmas gifts this years was the book "Kennedy & Johnson" by JFK's long-time secretary Evelyn Lincoln, which was allegedly suppressed at the behest of LBJ due to the unflattering portrayal of him. (I couldn't find any reference to that on the Internet, though, so take that rumor for what it's worth which may be very little.)

While I haven't gotten to anything really negative about Johnson yet, other than comments about the tension between JFK and LBJ. I have found some historically interesting facts in the book. For example, both Kennedy and Johnson felt that 1960 was their opportunity to run for President and waiting would not only ruin their chances, but the chances of others from their various "groups". A Kennedy loss would harm other Catholics' chances, as a Johnson loss would harm future Southerners. This, too, heightened the tension between them as did the different styles of their campaigns: JFK running a populist campaign, competing in many primaries to show Catholic candidates could win votes among the people, while Johnson ran an insider's campaign.

The differences in styles also was displayed by their announcements as candidates for President. Given that we're about embark on the primary schedule of the 2008 campaign, I found their announcement dates particularly interesting. This coming year, Iowa will be holding their caucuses on January 3rd. In 1960, JFK didn't announce until January 2nd. LBJ didn't announce his candidacy until July 5th. 48 years ago, candidates weren't announcing until almost Independence Day, this year, we'll likely have known our nominees for about 4 months by then.

I can't say this particular development is an improvement. Not all progress is positive.

December 21, 2007

Today in History: The King meets the President

Read more about it

December 20, 2007

Long Live The Queen!

John J. Miller points out on The Corner:

Today, Queen Elizabeth II becomes England's oldest monarch, passing Victoria. She is currently its fourth-longest-reigning monarch. To become tops in that category, she'll have to remain queen to 2012, passing George III.

Every day that E2 is queen is a day that Prince Charles isn't king. May she be the Energizer Bunny of royalty.

I think that's a sentiment we can all echo.

Passing Debt on to the next generation

An argument you frequently hear against government deficit spending is that it's not proper to pass our debt on to the next generation. As a general principle, this is certainly true. Unfortunately, those making this argument are often expressing disagreement with what the money is being spent on, rather than on the total amount of spending. As a contemporary example, witness the Democrats who argued so fervently against deficit spending when they were out of power, but are now quite eager to expand the deficit to cover their pet projects.

However, there are circumstances when deficit spending is not only proper, but necessary. For one example, think of a new government building. If that building will be used for the next 50 years, it's completely appropriate to pay for that building over a 50 year span. Even though we're passing that debt on to the next generation, the debt is attached to a building they will still be using. An even more extreme example is war debt. It was less than a year that the United Kingdom finished paying off its World War II debt. Had they not passed the burden of paying for World War II on to their children and grandchildren, those generations might not have their own nation to support. Those generations clearly enjoy the benefits of the debt their parents and grandparents ran up, so it's not inappropriate for them to bear some of the responsibility for it.

As a final point, why are so many of those who are quick to argue that it's wrong to pass a burden on to the next generation so eager to support the supposed right of a woman to make sure a member of that generation doesn't exist? If it's wrong to make the next generation bear our burdens through a financial debt, why is it acceptable to make them bear our financial or psychological burdens by paying with their lives through abortion? Speaking for myself, and most would no doubt agree, I'd rather be in debt than dead.

December 18, 2007

The Great White Fleet and its Lessons for Today

Why TR Claimed the Seas

Yet if there was a lesson here, it was lost to the U.S. during the interwar period. Just 13 years after the Great White Fleet returned to the U.S., it was physically scrapped under the terms of the Washington Naval Treaty, which set strict limits on the number and size of battleships the major powers could build and deploy. Only after Pearl Harbor and World War II did Americans really seem to learn the lesson that their position as a maritime power could not be wished away, and that their maritime interests could only be defended by a powerful Navy.

That remains no less true today, even as the Navy goes through something of an identity crisis. America's wars have become up-country affairs, and the big ships of our blue-water Navy are not quite adapted to brown-green waters where today's conflicts are likely to take place. John McCain, whose grandfather sailed with the fleet (and was among the officers pictured here listening to Roosevelt), recently complained to The Wall Street Journal about the huge cost overruns in the development of a new generation of so-called Littoral Combat Ships.

Isolationism, while rhetorically attractive, is not really an option in today's world. As this article points out, it dragged us into wars last century and may do so again in this one if we aren't careful.

December 15, 2007

Scissors beats Paper

Scissors beats rock - Best Pic Ever

Damn right it does.

Hat Tip: Club for Growth

November 21, 2007

Evangelical Author Discovers Early Christians, Tries to Avoid Acknowledging they were Catholic

Bryan Liftin is a self-described “proud, dispensational, conservative, born-again fundie.” He is also the author of Getting to Know the Church Fathers, which discusses the early Christians and their beliefs. The following quotes are from an interview he gave to Christianity Today:

I began to see them as my forefathers, that I might feel an organic connection. And that church history is a continuous story. We can recover the fathers as our own and we can recover them through a direct line back, so that all the richness of church history becomes ours. That's what I want to do for the Christian today: I want the Christian to understand that there's a richness to their history that they're missing; embrace it and let it be something that inspires you.

As Steve Ray (a convert to Catholicism from Protestantism) puts it: "So far so good. This was the exact sentiment I had when I began to read them—thinking that I would discover fellow Evangelicals who held to the simply “Bible Alone” and “Faith Alone” theology of “real Christianity.” If [sic] found differently. I find it sad and disappointing that contemporary Christians have avoided and ignored this period of the Church. "

I can second that concept; I've found my faith greatly enriched by understanding what the early Christians wrote and believed. It does remind that we are part of a historic Church that leads back to the time of Christ. We actually did exist before Vatican II, despite what some people seem to tell us. We're part of an organic Church who teaches the same things that the early Christians taught, we just have come to understand them more fully.

(Side note: an example of this is our teaching on sexuality. Up until the '60s no one ever seriously challenged the teaching on the use of God's gift of our sexuality; they have ignored it, but they didn't raise serious challenges to it. That changed with the Sexual Revolution and most Christians across denominations were caught flat-footed and unsure how to respond. Most responses fell into one of two categories: "You're right; go at like bunnies and have a good time." or "Because we said so." And that's understandable, they'd never had to think about the issue. Not just they, but all Christianity through history. Fortunately, Karol Wojtyla had been thinking about it, and after his election as Pope, promulgated his teaching of the Theology of the Body
which shows how our entire body, not just our sexuality, "has a specific meaning and is capable of revealing answers regarding fundamental questions about us and our lives." Papal biographer George Weigel has referred to this as a "theological time bomb" set to explode in the 21st century that could help us recapture a proper understanding surrounding the use and wonder of our sexuality. This is just one example of how the Church can know what God's teaching is, but not necessarily understand the "why" when first asked.)

Anyway....

Unfortunately, Litfin misses an obvious connection when talking about the beliefs of the Church Fathers:

You have to realize that they're not evangelicals. So some of the points where we would differ with them would be the points where we would differ with Roman Catholicism. Some of their doctrine of salvation is going to be sacramental. They're not going to use the term inerrancy, but they give full credence to Scripture, and [see it as] inspired. ... There can be a works-orientedness to them, where there's a paying-off of God. You can see that in Tertullian, for example.

He comes so close, but probably due to a life-long habit misses the obvious point. As he says, Evangelicals will disagree with the early Christians in the same places where they disagree with Catholics. He misses, though, the obvious connection that the early Christians and Catholics teach the same things; the early Christians were Catholics! As Ray puts it:

Yes, he has to ignore and avoid their basic theology and teaching on salvation because it is too sacramental, too Catholic. He wants his readers to know these first Christians, but not to really know them. Let’s find what they believed that agrees with us (the final judges) and ignore the part that sounds too Catholic.

His admission that “You have to realize that they’re not evangelicals” is very revealing. What he is really saying is that he has a different religion today than the first Christians held in the first centuries.

Who has the true theology and practice—those 2,000 years removed or the ones who learned the faith directly from the Apostles? Hum! Who should be listened to with more credence? An admitted 21 century “fundie” or the martyrs who learned at the feet of the Apostles John, Peter and Paul? I know at whose feet I will sit to learn.

He makes a very salient point: why should we take the word of a person living two thousand years after Christ over the word of someone who learned at the feet of the apostles. Ignatius of Antioch, in whose writings we find the earliest extant reference to the Church as "Catholic," died in 107 and learned the faith from Peter. If Litfin teaches something different than Ignatius, who should we listen to? Doesn't seem like that hard a decision.

Ray continues:

Litfin says that to discuss their theology opens a can of worms. Yes it would! And for those who dare to open the can of worms very often see the poverty of their modern Evangelicalism.

Modern Protestantism is very different from the early Christians. Those who begin to dig deeper frequently become Catholics. It is a dangerous thing for modern Evangelicals to encourage their followers to read the Fathers since they will soon lose many of the best and brightest to the Catholic Church. I don’t think this will be a big trend, it is far to dangerous to encourage the reading of such subversive literature.

A number of my favorite Catholic authors, if not most, are former Protestants and many of them admit to converting after studying the early Christians. Recognizing in their teaching a sacramental theology, belief in a visible Church with apostolic succession, a sacrificial priesthood, the Real Presence of Christ in the Eucharist and the Church's ability to teach infallibly. (Not to mention the fact they were preaching without a Bible compiled yet. If the "Bible alone," were true, what did Christians do before the canon of the Bible was finalized? Sit around waiting for God to give them the Bible? Of course not, they preached what they learned from the Church! After all, many Christians couldn't read; were they left unsaved since they couldn't turn to the Bible?)

One Protestant told me they don't read the early Christians because they wouldn't know who to believe. That argument is a bit of a canard: there's not much disagreement on doctrine. As discussed above, the disagreements weren't so much on the "what," but on the "why" or the "how". Where there was disagreement on the "what," such as the dispute over Arianism about the eternal existence of Christ, a Church Council was called that settled the matter definitively.

And I think that's the real reason many Protestants don't want to study early Church history: when they do, they find a Church that is Catholic. Litfin may be fighting recognizing that, but hopefully his book will help other Protestant to realize that fact. As the saying goes, "God draws straight with crooked lines," and this book may be yet another example of that.
Hat Tip: Steve Ray

November 15, 2007

AD or CE?

Karl Keating brings up an interesting point in his most recent E-Letter:

All in all, "The History of Time" is an informative if, for the calendar-impaired, often a confusing book. Near the end the author brings up something he mentions otherwise only in his preface. It is something that bothers me and perhaps bothers you: the use of C.E. in place of A.D. and of B.C.E. in place of B.C.

In more and more publications we're seeing the traditional terms A.D. (Anno Domini = Year of the Lord) and B.C. (Before Christ) being dropped in favor of C.E. (Common Era) and B.C.E. (Before the Common Era).

Here is what Holford-Strevens notes about the system used to refer to the time line:

"The Christian era is too well established to be challenged for its religious origin; in China, indeed, where Christianity has never been more than a minority religion, it wa