Worldviews

A Culture Without Fathers Is a Culture of Death

January 29, 2010
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A Culture Without Fathers Is a Culture of Death

Last September a young black man was beaten to death on the south side of Chicago, and this violence was caught on a cell phone camera and seen around the world. This was not good PR for President Obama, especially just before he was headed to Copenhagen to woo the International Olympic Committee to bring the games to Chicago in 2016. So he sent his secretary of education, Arne Duncan, and other big wigs to Chicago to show that his administration took this violence seriously, and most importantly that they cared. I heard Mr. Duncan on NPR at the time talk about what needed to be done to stem this all too prevalent violence, and he mentioned several things including job training programs, mentoring, and other such community organization kind of things. What stood out and infuriated me at the time was that he didn’t mention fathers or intact families. It never occurred to this former head of the Chicago City Schools that the breakdown of the traditional two-parent, two gender need I say, family contributes to youth violence in the inner city, let alone is a primary cause of it. The way I felt that day listening to the

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Only the Left can Judge Cultural Influence

January 29, 2010
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Only the Left can Judge Cultural Influence

Recognizing a novelist’s, filmmaker’s, or visual artist’s influence on society is perfectly acceptable as long as those Cultural Influence Professionals nudge folks in the liberal-left direction, and one limits comments to description alone. If, however, you criticize or create work that pushes back against this influence be prepared to suffer slings and arrows. Times Arts Correspondent Ben Hoyle noted J.D. Salinger’s influence on American youth. Catcher in the Rye, Hoyle noted, had spread its influence into many undernourished corners of cultural life. Along with Elvis Presley’s music and James Dean’s swaggering Rebel Without a Cause persona, it was Salinger’s Caulfield who best dramatised the emergence of a defiant youth identity in 1950s America. It helped to create demand among young people for their own cultural products, a demand that would fuel the youth cultural revolutions that convulsed the West, and later the whole world. Salinger helped to invent the notion of teenage angst, and is a father figure to everything from punk music to Donnie Darko, and Bart Simpson to The Graduate. In music, Guns N’ Roses and Green Day are two of the modern bands who have worn its influence most explicitly. In film, the director Wes Anderson often

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‘Air America’ Bankrupt, Shutting Down

January 22, 2010
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‘Air America’ Bankrupt, Shutting Down

Radio audiences give loud ‘no’ to progressive politics.

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DeMille on Rights, Liberty, and the Right to Work

January 19, 2010
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DeMille on Rights, Liberty, and the Right to Work

The late Cecil B. DeMille was not only an underappreciated master filmmaker but also a very serious thinker. In fact, the latter was what caused the former: his devotion to free markets, individual liberty, and opposition to communism incensed film critics during the 1950s and thereafter, and in a predictably petty way they refused to accord full recognition of his accomplishments as a filmmaker. A very good example of DeMille’s social and political thought is now on display at the Ludwig Von Mises Institute website. “The Right to Work” is a reprinting of DeMille’s testimony before the House Committee on Education and Labor in 1948, and in it DeMille makes a strong case that the federal government’s favoritism toward labor unions denies people their inalienable right to work. DeMille begins with a strong statement of support for the classical liberal concern for the rights of the individual : My concern is for the individual. . . . The touchstone for any law—or any government, anywhere in the world—is the question: How does individual freedom fare? In many parts of the world, the freedom of the individual has been set back by centuries. Mussolini is dead, but his fascist idea lives—the

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Up Helly Aa! A Celebration of Fire and Vikings in Shetland

January 18, 2010
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Up Helly Aa! A Celebration of Fire and Vikings in Shetland

Every mid-winter in the Shetland Islands, the residents celebrate their Nordic heritage (the islands changed hands between the Scots and Vikings for centuries early in the fist half of the last millennium) with a fire festival, commonly called “Up Helly Aa” by the locals. It’s celebrated in just about every Shetland town, including Scalloway, where my wife’s mother was born and her uncle now lives. The festival — which was first held after the Napoleonic wars — celebrates the end of the “yule season,” and has evolved to include a procession of torch-bearers wearing festive garb. Some wear Viking outfits. Some just wear special T-shirts. And some even dress like a Vegas-era Elvis). A good time is had by all — and good times are valuable in such a harsh climate in winter. At the end of the procession, a painstakingly built replica viking galley in the harbor is set ablaze in a spectacular display. It’s the kind of festival would have a hard time getting off the ground in the United States. You’re going to what? Carry oil-dripping torches? Around children? You’re going to set fire to a wooden ship? In the water? But what about the fish? Do

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Student Sheds Light on Necessity for Reform in K-12 Schools

January 13, 2010
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Student Sheds Light on Necessity for Reform in K-12 Schools

There is a great deal of energy and resources spent addressing the issue of Left-wing domination on America’s colleges and universities. David Horowitz has done yeoman’s work documenting the networks indoctrinating students in higher education. Groups such as the Intercollegiate Studies Institute, Institute for Humane Studies, and others work diligently combating the illiberal education provided in many colleges and universities. This quote, from Lloyd Marcus writing for the American Thinker, reminds us that we need to focus as much, if not more so, on K-12 education: “Years ago, a white friend’s son came home from middle school in tears over the cruelty of our founding fathers against Native Americans. Today, that kid is a 23 year old America-hating Marxist. Thank you public schools for your liberal America-sucks curriculum.” Years later K-12 students are getting much of the same as reported by a student in the Chicago, Illinois area, who is currently in the 12th grade. Her class schedule includes Advanced Placement English, Advanced Placement European History, Pre-Calculus, Theater Arts, French, and Gym class. When asked if she has ever experienced what might be considered indoctrination in any of her classes she responded: All the time! The books we are given

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Denying Hollywood’s Agenda Prohibits a Culture of Liberty

January 7, 2010
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Denying Hollywood’s Agenda Prohibits a Culture of Liberty

The only explanation I can come up with to explain those who deny Hollywood’s left-wing agenda is that they want to remain on the “Above the Line” cocktail party invite list. Either that or they are lying to themselves, and are nothing more than useful idiots to left-wing ideologues. The Washington Post recently reported on Hollywood’s turn toward films promoting spiritual themes. The litany of spiritual themed movies includes Avatar, The Road, The Invention of Lying, The Lovely Bones, The Blind Side, The Book of Eli, Legion, and The Last Station. While many might pause at the “spirituality” the Dream Factory promotes in some of these films, I was struck by this opening quote from Greg Wright, editor at HollywoodJesus.com: “The more paranoid elements of our culture tend to think Hollywood has a proactive agenda, that producers have a grand scheme to use movies to shape the thinking of audiences. I don’t subscribe to that school. I believe that Hollywood gives audiences what audiences want to see. If people don’t want to see movies with certain messages, they won’t buy tickets. So if there’s a trend out there, it’s one reflecting what people are already thinking and feeling.”

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Conservatism: A Correctable Mental Disorder

January 6, 2010
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Conservatism: A Correctable Mental Disorder

Social Psychologists, living sheltered lives behind academia’s ivy covered walls, seemingly will not stop until conservatives are either re-educated and get with the “progressive” program, or resting in a thorazine haze within some institution. I would not be shocked to find conservatism included in a future edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. In 2003 a couple of UC Berkeley Psychologists co-wrote a paper (link is to PDF document) for the American Psychological Association describing conservatism as deriving from a personality driven by authoritarianism, dogmatism, and intolerance of ambiguity. Conservatives, these psychologists asserted, require closure, have a regulatory focus, and demand terror management. People, whom I’m sure these academics would be described as “right-wing extremists,” provide ideological rationalization for social dominance and system justification. In short: “The core ideology of conservatism stresses resistance to change and justification of inequality and is motivated by needs that vary situationally and dispositionally to manage uncertainty and threat.” In 2009, a team led by psychologist Kenneth E. Vail, went beyond the “conservatives are defective” thesis by asserting that conservatism can be fixed. If “compassionate values primed” then people are more likely to embrace so-called progressive values. In other words, our

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The Spirit of Copenhagen is Anathema to the Spirit of America

December 19, 2009
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The Spirit of Copenhagen is Anathema to the Spirit of America

Modern environmentalism is not some harmless desire for clean water and clean air. It is the implacable enemy of liberty and everything that has made American the greatest, most prosperous engine of freedom in the history of the world. Some might think I overstate the case. They would be wrong. I’ve read, as difficult as it is, much environmentalist claptrap, but I’ve found a wonderfully focused piece by a Brit name George Monbiot titled “This is bigger than climate change. It is a battle to redefine humanity.” Kind of says it all. This is correctly looked at as a battle of worldviews. One of autonomous man, defined by evolution as a product of time, matter and chance, and the other of man as the product of an omnipotent creator who lives in a world designed for him. These are mutually incompatible. The foundation of American exceptionalism is established in our Declaration of Independence in which it is proclaimed, “that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights, that among these are life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” Without a Creator, specifically of the Judeo-Christian tradition, America has nothing upon which it

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Zack Rawsthorne’s Diversity Lane: A Liberal Family Saga

December 9, 2009
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Zack Rawsthorne’s Diversity Lane: A Liberal Family Saga

If you’re missing the Goode Family and can’t wait until January 6 when that show re-airs on Comedy Central you can get your fix of mocking a liberal family’s politically correct insanity in Zack Rawsthorne’s Diversity Lane: A Liberal Family Saga. Here’s Zack’s description of this project: Diversity Lane chronicles the chaotic lives of an American family fully engulfed in modern Liberalism. As such they are self-destructive, tormented & a menace to society – a kind of modern day Addams Family in a never ending battle with common sense. This is more than just another conservative editorial illustrator at work. The focus on a single family gives it a running story that fans can follow. Furthermore, Zack’s site uses Roberto Gerhard’s Symphony No. 4 as background music and the ‘Story’ page has a few audio clips. The music gives the work a certain creepy, Twilight Zone feel and enhances the visitor’s experience wonderfully. This is some very nice work by a strong artist with a great sense of humor and an excellent eye for the politically correct nonsense to which so many liberals are enthralled. Cross-posted at ModernConservative.com

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Twilight Series=Mormon Apologetics + Vampires + Werewolves

December 6, 2009
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Twilight Series=Mormon Apologetics + Vampires + Werewolves

Literary scholar John Granger has identified a “distinctively Latter-day Saint theological-literary structure” in Stephanie Meyer’s popular books. His arguments deserve serious consideration by both fans and detractors of this pop culture phenomenon, writes Daniel Crandall.

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Diminished Responsibility Principle Debated

November 22, 2009
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Diminished Responsibility Principle Debated

The experts behind two Italian courts’ controversial decisions to reduce a convicted murderer’s jail time because they concluded that his genes predisposed him to commit murder have written a response to my and several other articles critical of the decision and concerned about its implications. Their extensive reply is available here, and I encourage you to give it a reading, to aid in drawing your own conclusions on this extremely important matter. My response to Prof. Satori follows:

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