I now like the Red Sox. How can you not pull for a team whose players have grown such serious beards? These aren’t soul patches or little goatees. These are long, bushy, Duck Dynasty kinds of beards. This is no “chicks dig ’em” kind of
I now like the Red Sox. How can you not pull for a team whose players have grown such serious beards? These aren’t soul patches or little goatees. These are long, bushy, Duck Dynasty kinds of beards. This is no “chicks dig ’em” kind of
We blogged about the phenomenon of tearing down or otherwise effacing buildings where terrible crimes were committed. It was announced that the Navy Yard office building in Washington, D.C., the site of the recent mass shooting in which 12 people were killed, is going to
The Gospel reading for last Sunday was the parable that makes perfectly clear why we are not saved by our works and why we cannot merit salvation: 7 “Will any one of you who has a servant plowing or keeping sheep say to him when he
We Americans tend to get suspicious of people enjoying themselves too much, especially if it involves some kind of physical crutch. Smoking was condemned as a vice even before the incontrovertible evidence of how bad it is for you. But now electronic cigarettes have been
The blind Chinese dissident, Chen Guangcheng, who battled China’s forced abortion policy, was imprisoned for four years, and made a daring escape to the United States had been dumped from his post at New York University on suspicion of fraternizing with Christians and pro-lifers; also
Is it better in the realm of politics to stand on principle or to pursue self-interest? Most of us would probably say the former. But Robert J. Samuelson argues that self-interest is superior, even morally, to following an ideology, which breeds conflict, governmental paralysis, and
I remember the government shutdown of 1995 and the huge uproar it caused among the general public. I don’t notice much of that happening today. The shutdown is not much of a shutdown, with over 80% of the government continuing as usual and the non-esssential
Literature, including and perhaps especially the more popular varieties, does more than provide escapist entertainment. It can also shape people’s imaginations so as to influence the actual world. Case in point: the recently departed author Tom Clancy, who, according to veterans Erin Simpson and Phillip
The ideal in the business world, especially for corporate leaders, has been the glad-handing extrovert. Consequently, private offices have given way to open cubicles so that everyone can mix and collaborate, even though that seldom happens. Also, everyone has to go to brainstorming meetings, even
A man doused himself with gasoline and set himself on fire on the National Mall in front of the Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. Though bystanders, quite nobly, tried to put out the fire, the man died of his injuries. As of this writing, no