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Respect

May 26, 2012
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Respect

"For love of country they accepted death." — James A. Garfield

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‘Mad Men’ Drapers Go to the Theater

May 25, 2012
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‘Mad Men’ Drapers Go to the Theater

Mad Men protagonist Don Draper is showing increasing disgust as the 1960s New Left culture begins its rise. Larry Kauffmann tells all about it.

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An Early American Libertarian Anarchist — Anne Hutchinson vs. The Theological Oligarchy

May 22, 2012
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An Early American Libertarian Anarchist — Anne Hutchinson vs. The Theological Oligarchy

"Better to be cast out of the Church than to deny Christ."

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‘House’ Conclusion Satisfies Both Emotions and Intellect

May 22, 2012
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‘House’ Conclusion Satisfies Both Emotions and Intellect

For me the most interesting thing about the Fox TV series House, the final episode of which aired last night, was the way the narratives balanced cynicism and compassion, doubt and faith, solipsism and humanitarianism. What was perhaps most extraordinary about the show was that it managed to accomplish this through the depiction of its complex central character, Dr. Gregory House, a cynical, manipulative, oddly selfish medical diagnostician whose great genius is applied to solving medical mysteries.

House has no spiritual beliefs and looks upon the human race with undiluted cynicism: "Everybody lies," he says, and that, to him, is enough. He is devoted strictly to the truth.

What "the truth," is, however, has always been the real mystery of the show. . . .

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I Lost on Jeopardy

May 21, 2012
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I Lost on Jeopardy

I dedicate this post to Tom Friedman, one of the most pedestrian, overrated intellects of this or any other age.

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“All Effect and No Cause”: Colliding Branes, Bouncing Universes, Promiscuous Singularities, and Fashionable Nothings — Five Versions of How It All Began

May 21, 2012
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“All Effect and No Cause”: Colliding Branes, Bouncing Universes, Promiscuous Singularities, and   Fashionable Nothings — Five Versions of How It All Began

"Fallacies do not cease to be fallacies because they become fashions." — G. K. Chesterton

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Was “Smash” a smash?

May 20, 2012
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Was “Smash” a smash?

One of NBC’s few, highly-rated new shows last year was Smash, a drama about trying to get a new musical onto Broadway. The season’s final episode was last Monday, and it’s been renewed for a new year. But was season one of Smash good enough for viewers to check back in for another season?

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Dispelling Some Myths About the World’s Most Persecuted People

May 19, 2012
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Dispelling Some Myths About the World’s Most Persecuted People

"Jews and Arabs are all really children of Abraham."

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‘Hunter’ Is an Intriguing Thriller, Weakened By Its Own Concept

May 15, 2012
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‘Hunter’ Is an Intriguing Thriller, Weakened By Its Own Concept

“… They even make virtues out of ‘humility’ and ‘turning the other cheek’ and ‘loving everybody.’ Because it alleviates their guilt. It’s much nicer to pretend to yourself that your passivity makes you a saint, rather than just another gutless puke who won’t take a stand for what’s right.”

The passage above kind of encapsulates my ambivalence about the novel HUNTER: A Thriller, by Robert Bidinotto. There’s much to enjoy and appreciate in the book, and it promotes some ideas with which I strongly agree. But in my view it’s taken a little farther than I, as a Christian, can endorse. It’s not merely that I disagree with the Randian point of view on display here; I think the treatment weakens the argument (and the story) in some ways. . . .

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Shelby’s ‘Killer Swell’ Is . . . Pretty Swell

May 11, 2012
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Shelby’s ‘Killer Swell’ Is . . . Pretty Swell

Lars Walker has often written about the archetype of the American private eye. Particularly the fact that he’s often a figure of male fantasy. What guy, in his heart, doesn’t sometimes dream of living unfettered, setting his own hours, having uncommitted sex with a series of dangerous dames, and being the Spillaneian Jury?. . . .

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Bring on the Carbon Dioxide — The Upside of “Global Warming”

May 11, 2012
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Bring on the Carbon Dioxide — The Upside of “Global Warming”

"... the potential benefit described here is a huge one."

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Mad Men and Beatles

May 10, 2012
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Mad Men and Beatles

You may have heard about a little controversy from the latest episode of Mad Men. Protagonist Don Draper listens to the first couple minutes of "Tomorrow Never Knows" from the Beatles’ recently released Revolver album, then stops the music in a gesture that is equal parts boredom and disgust.

Some fans of the show thought the scene was ridiculous, claiming that any high-powered ad man would have been hip to The Beatles in 1966 and would not have been alienated by a little psychedelia. I think this critique misses the point completely. The end of the episode n is probably a taste of things to come and – at the risk of sounding absurdly grandiose – might even be an inflection point for the series. . . .

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