
Stuck
At least Levin & Ponnuru understand that the Republicans need some fresh thinking on economic issues, beyond their standard pro-growth ideology.
At least Levin & Ponnuru understand that the Republicans need some fresh thinking on economic issues, beyond their standard pro-growth ideology.
It is interesting how the two Republican frontrunners in South Carolina are summing up their motivations:
McCain:
I am running for president of the United States of America because I believe the transcendent challenge of the 21st century is the struggle against radical Islamic extremism, which takes many forms, is the greatest force of evil we’ve ever faced, and is bent on our destruction and our extinction.
Huckabee:
The Huckabee campaign, by contrast, worked to drill into the conservative heart of his base, running just one ad which proclaims him a “Christian Leader” exclusively since Wednesday. It begins, “Faith doesn’t just influence me; it defines me.”
Sandro Magister has the complete collection in English of the materials relevant to the Pope-Sapienza incident.
Leon Wieseltier ponders Barack Obama. It's amazing somebody like him would rather vote for McCain.
David Warren comments on the intolerance of "human rights."
A good article on the state of American education. It makes the case that market-style competition is not enough to overcome the devastation of the quality of teaching wrought by the ideologues who rule the schools of education.
Obviously Melanie Phillips is not excited about Barak Obama.
Peggy Noonan summarizes the Iowa caucuses. Mark Steyn agrees with her diagnosis. On Friday David Brooks had a similar intuition. One can only hope that all of this indicates some kind of cultural shift, at least on the conservative side.
The New Republic wanted to write a story about Ron Paul volunteers, but ended up writing a story about being young.
In one form or another, most of us have been educated to believe in the myth of the noble savage.
Kenia provides another refutation to the idea that democracy is a matter of having a costitutional structure, elections, a free press etc. Not that these things are not good; the problem is that good structures reflect the life of a people united by common ideals. If the people do not share common ideals (which can only be fostered by education), "tribal" interests will always make democracy an empty word.
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