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`cause paper's overrated

. . . That’s when she told me a story About free milk and a cow. She said, ‘No hug-ee, no kiss-ee, Until I get a wedding vow.’ —“Keep Your Hands to Yourself,” The Georgia Satellites, 1986 Laura Gallier, who runs a Texas-based abstinence education program, was dumbfounded by the news that bidding in the online auction of a California woman’s … [Read More]

I have always found it bizarre that some of the most pro-war Americans are pro-lifers. To be passionate enough to protest on a street corner in the hopes that you might save lives is something I can understand. Yet for pro-lifers to consistently and enthusiastically vote for leaders whose foreign policies will admittedly lead to the deaths of thousands of civilians … [Read More]

I guess I’m supposed to be shocked and dismayed by the clips, released this weekend, of Prince Harry using some rather mild racial language and generally acting like a buffoon while his First Mechanized Brigade’s tours Iraq. But for some reason I wasn’t much offended at all.  Sure, it’s best not to call a member of your own brigade “our little … [Read More]

With his public approval where Harry Truman’s stood when he left office, George W. Bush gave his last press conference yesterday. And like that predecessor he often identifies with, Bush showed a Trumanesque defiance of his critics—and a Trumanesque failure to understand what ruined his presidency. He denounced protectionism, as he has with dismissive contempt since he went to New Hampshire … [Read More]

Razib Khan

The Limits of Certitude

by Razib Khan on January 12, 2009

Interacting with people in the sciences over my life one of the major issues I have noticed is an extreme hubris when it comes to their opinions in regards to non-scientific issues. Many individuals in the sciences consider all issues fundamentally scientific.  This engenders a certitude when it comes to public policy; there are no opinions, there are true descriptions of … [Read More]

When Thierry Magon de la Villehuchet committed suicide just before Christmas, I hoped against hope that others would do the same. No such luck. Villehuchet was an aristocrat, a gentleman and an honest man. He felt responsible for the loss of $1.4 billion and he took the honourable way out. I did not know Villehuchet but people who did have spoken … [Read More]

R.J. Stove

The Hoax Down Under

by R.J. Stove on January 12, 2009

Say what you like against us Australians, there is one activity where we excel, and that is, in producing artistic hoaxers. The nonexistent modernist poetic genius “Ern Malley” in the 1940s; a subsequent platoon of “Aboriginal” creators (“B. Wongar”, “Wanda Koolmatrie”, “Eddie Burrup”) who invariably turned out to be about as “Aboriginal” as Nicole Kidman; a nonexistent Ukrainian novelist named “Helen … [Read More]

Under discussion: Vindicating Lincoln: Defending the Politics of Our Greatest President, Thomas L. Krannawitter, Roman & Littlefield (2008), 376 pages Hamilton’s Curse: How Jefferson’s Arch Enemy Betrayed the American Revolution—and What It Means for Americans Today, Thomas DiLorenzo, Crown Forum (2008), 256 pages.  Christianity made an epochal change by elevating ordinary people to spiritual equality with the social, political, and economic … [Read More]

Barack Obama, it is said, will inherit the worst times since the Great Depression. Not to minimize the crisis we are in, but we need a little perspective here. The Great Depression began with the Great Crash of 1929. By 1931, unemployment had reached 16 percent. By 1933, 89 percent of stock value had been wiped out, the economy had shrunk … [Read More]

A few weeks ago when the Fed announced a strategy designed to bring down long-term interest and home mortgage rates through unlimited Treasury bond purchases, government debt staged a spectacular rally. To the unschooled market observer, the spike may be difficult to understand. After all, why would the value of Treasury bonds rise while their underlying credit quality is deteriorating faster … [Read More]

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Sniper's Tower

The New Nobility


Tangentially relevant to Richard’s recent post and the Gottfried/Hunter discussion (here, here, here, here, and here), last night I came across this candid piece of satire: “Let’s say you were a … [Read More]

Posted by Matthew Roberts on January 31, 2009


The Republicans’ Obama


There’s an old joke that goes, “Whatdaya call the only black person—er, excuse me, African- American—at an official Republican gathering.” The punch line—“Mr. Keynote Speaker.” I guess we can now change … [Read More]

Posted by Richard Spencer on January 31, 2009


No, not quite


The lede in a Washington Post story: In soup kitchens, food pantries and universities across the country, activists are planting the seeds for an overhaul of the way America feeds its … [Read More]

Posted by Tim Worstall on January 31, 2009


Boycott the Superbowl


And NBC while you’re at it. That network is censoring a tasteful prolife Superbowl ad it had initially accepted: Yeah, America’s babykillers are all about freedom of speech. [Read More]

Posted by John Zmirak on January 31, 2009


The 10,000 Year Explosion, culture X biology = evolution


Last fall John Derbyshire published “Hear No Genes, See No Genes, Speak No Genes—the Jargon of ‘Culturalism’,” which sourced Greg Cochran’s work. His book, The 10,000 Year Explosion: How Civilization Accelerated … [Read More]

Posted by Razib Khan on January 30, 2009