Friday, March 31, 2023
Hmm …
Well-deserved praise
… this vital intellectual history is not taught in the schools, nor do our mass media manage to give it adequate attention, with extremes of militant cultural Leftism and commercial-libertarian nihilism dominant not only in the USA but all over the West: “radical chic” oscillating with pervasive, collective amnesia, attention-deficit disorder, and “amusing ourselves to death.”
Worrisome …
There are countless ways in which this implicit materialism manifests itself in the Church today. Youth sports on Sundays (even in “Catholic” leagues!) downplay the spiritual importance of this divinely-ordered day of rest; Catholic schools prioritizing public school educational standards over imparting the Faith to children undermine the importance of their spiritual health; attempts to make the Mass more “relevant” instead of more transcendent fashion a man-centered, rather than God-centered, liturgy; emphasizing “social justice” as the top priority of the Church diminishes its spiritual mission; and, of course, agreeing to classify the Sacraments as “non-essential” services (while Home Depot remained open) undercut the very purpose of the Catholic religion.
When the archdiocese shut down Masses at the start of Covid, I sent the archbishop a clip of Alan Rickmab in Robin Hood Prince of Thieves telling his scribe “That’s it then. Cancel the kitchen scraps for lepers and orphans, no more merciful beheadings, and call off Christmas.”
I read The God Delusion, but was unimpressed. Dawkins was practicing philosophy without a license and with little or no insight. As I remarked to a friend, nobody in his right mind believes in the God Richard Dawkins doesn’t believe in.
Elie
Thursday, March 30, 2023
My favorite conductor …
Writers often dignified Walter with spiritual metaphors — the author Stefan Zweig compared the beam on his face while conducting to “the countenance of the angels when they look upon God” — and it is revealing of his artistry that they were exactly what Walter aspired to achieve. For him, the Germanic music from Bach to Strauss was pure, uplifting, redemptive. It offered an “unchanging message of comfort,” he wrote in his memoir “Theme and Variations”; its “wordless gospel proclaims in a universal language what the thirsting soul of man is seeking beyond this life.”
Just so you know …
Something to think on …
Wednesday, March 29, 2023
Something tomthink on …
Tuesday, March 28, 2023
Good for her …
One can hardly fault Eberstadt for not wanting to subject herself to the juvenile pageantry that would accompany her visit, and for having no desire to engage with people who have no sense of themselves or the world around them. I could have more insightful discussions with our dogs than the average college student.
Hear, hear …
The crucial dynamic is not just the assertion of fraught claims but the continued advancement of them after they have been debunked. The New York Times, for example, didn’t just declare in its “1619 Project” that the American Revolution was fought to preserve slavery, it pooh-poohed complaints from leading historians that this was false.
Much in what he says …
The archetypal expressive individualist, according to Bellah, is Walt Whitman, whose most famous work, Leaves of Grass, begins with the words, “I celebrate myself.” For Whitman, in contrast to Franklin, the goal of life is not to maximize efficiency for the sake of material acquisition but rather to luxuriate in sensual and intellectual experiences, to take pleasure in one’s bodily life and sexuality and to express oneself freely, without any concern for social conventions.
Something to think on …
Monday, March 27, 2023
Oh, wow …
Something to keep an eye out for
I recently received in the mail the latest book by poet Lynn Levin, a collection of stories entitled House Parties (Spuyten Duyvil). The pub date is May.
The other day I read the first of the stories, “The Path to Halfway Falls.” I thought it magical. And since I have no outlet for reviewing these days, I thought I’d bring the book to public attention in a new way. I am going to post accounts of my reading it. This will be the first installment.
This first story seems straightforward enough:
Chuck, Higby, and Dean set out at first light intending to head to a lookout over a valley.
About an hour and a half into their trek, the three friends met a wide-eyed man and a dark-eyed woman descending the trail. The man, his voice breathy with excitement, told the three friends that he and the woman had seen an extraordinary sight: a slender waterfall not in the guidebooks or maps. This was Halfway Falls, a secret passed from hiker to hiker. Fed by snow melt and spring rains, Halfway Falls sent off veils of mist that looked like flying angels, and the stream of water was so thin that it evaporated before it reached the ground. That was why they called it Halfway Falls.
The man tells Dean that “You can always go to the lookout … but you can only see Halfway Falls now.”
“See it before it disappears,” the woman tells him.
Dean is enthralled:
A secret place. Flying angels. A sight you could only see now. Dean could sense that the couple was exceptionally, almost preternaturally eager, and their enthusiasm inspired in him an overwhelming desire to see the awe-inspiring Halfway Falls.
Dean is sort of the odd man out of the hiking trio, a wallpaper hanger who is the caregiver for his mother, who has MS. His sister is keeping an eye on Mom today, but his sister wants him back by 4:30 that afternoon. He has no wife and no girlfriend.
Chuck is married, but has a girlfriend on the side. Higby is married also, but seems to have a low opinion of his wife.
Higby gets directions from the couple:
They were to follow the present path up to a rock that looked like the famous comedian Bob Hope, turn left, and hike off trail through the forest; they weren’t sure how far, maybe half a mile. Then they were to listen carefully for the sound of falling water. Owing to the slender stream of the falls, the sound was faint. Nearby was a rock outcropping that looked like a mountain lion with its mouth open. To see the falls, all you had to do was climb on top of the mountain lion rock and hang over on your stomach.
But I think that’s as far I’ll go. I don’t want to give any spoilers and I don’t want to prevent others from enjoying the story on their own. But we learn much about how the three friends grow closer.
Levin is a very poet and her ear for language is evident throughout.
And then there’s the raven, who may just be the star of the tale.
Something to think on …
Sunday, March 26, 2023
Touching …
As the end neared, the novelist was paranoid, delusional, irritable, sullen and wished vainly for another “belle epoque.”
I couldn’t agree more …
Martin Amis
Something to think on …
Saturday, March 25, 2023
Something to think on …
Friday, March 24, 2023
Surprise, surprise …
Horse’s ass alert …
Something to think on …
Good for them …
“They are acting absolutely directly against the Catholic doctrines– against the definition of the dogmas. There must be a trial. They must be sentenced. And they must be removed from their office– unless they convert,” said the cardinal.
Thursday, March 23, 2023
Something to think on …
Wednesday, March 22, 2023
More appreciation …
It is not only in their themes that these poems are revelatory. Bottum’s practice of poetry hovers always close to music and song. In English, our paradigmatic line is the iambic pentameter. The five-stress line is flexible enough to be musical when needed, but it can also accommodate the plainest speech and the most ornate and golden rhetoric. Bottum’s poems are usually one metrical foot shorter, in some sort of loose or tight tetrameter or trimeter. Tetrameter is the language of ballad and song, of music almost to the exclusion of rhetoric.
Tracking the decline …
The truth of the matter is that the media has given up any pretense of being unbiased, yet one can’t help but wonder if this is a reflection of the chaos we tend to see on American college campuses or the cause of it.
Dumb as posts …
The most striking aspect of the whole ordeal, and indeed even of the existence of a company such as Inclusive Minds, is the abounding narcissism inherent in this new breed of cultural censor. What level of self-regard must one possess to feel qualified to rewrite classic novels? Would these same “sensitivity readers'' also consider themselves qualified to retouch the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel in order to render it less patriarchal? And if not, what then makes them feel qualified to rewrite entire sections of The BFG?
Live and let live …
No one should have any problem with what Reimer said, but they sure will. The Left wants to force everyone to surrender to their way of thinking. The people who claim to be the most accepting and understanding are also the most intolerant of anyone who disagrees.
A very insightful piece …
For me, being gay has never been particularly solitary or sorrowful; and so, to the extent that my gay experience prepared me for conversion, it was conversion not as rescue but as deepening. The virtues I discovered in gay communities helped me understand love, and recognize Love when He came to me; the beauty I experienced in women prepared me for the absolute Beauty. It seems to me that “gay” and “straight” are both odd modern conglomerates which include a mix of temptations to sin and possibilities for love. “Side B” is a big umbrella, and there are many people under it whose spirituality centers on Jesus as the light in our solitude, the companion in our sorrow. I have needed that Jesus myself, especially in my sobriety. But I have found that “side B” people are open to the possibility that Jesus may also be found in shared joy.
Appreciation …
The old ways are always being contrasted with present-day American banality, with the encroachment of chintzy commercial culture even into the hinterlands. This flattening, atomizing force is what seemingly accounts for Portis’s preoccupation with Gnomon-esque guilds and other such flimsy attempts at restoring enchantment and community to a culture that has lost all meaningful trace of either.
Talk about worrisome …
“These increases, the largest in decades, followed a period of great progress in reducing pediatric mortality rates,” the authors wrote. They assigned blame to “manmade pathogens,” particularly guns and drugs.
What the hell is going on in our society?
Something to think on …
Tuesday, March 21, 2023
I fear so …
Where we find ourselves these days …
On Jan. 17, Philadelphia Flyers defenseman Ivan Provorov declined to wear a pride jersey in warmups, citing his Christian (Russian Orthodox) beliefs. So he sat in the locker room, banished, while his teammates took their pre-game skate.
… within days, No. 9 Provorov game replica sweaters were selling out on the NHL Shop and at Fanatics, indicating that despite the hatred that was heaped on him – shameful hockey media hack E.J. Hradek suggested that Provorov return to Europe and “maybe get involved” in Russia’s war in Ukraine, while sports writer Cyd Zeigler huffed that “Proporov chose to embrace prejudice” – not just a few appreciated his position.
For what it’s worth, my friend Katherine Miller and I shared power of attorney for a gay couple. So don’t call us homophobic.
Our despicable political class
“How much you want to bet these news operations covering it, like MSNBC, NBC, and the rest, have entered into non-disclosure agreements?” Levin asked. “Now we call it ‘hush money’”?
Something to think on …
This is not a joke …
Much in what he says …
The Journal doesn’t discuss this factor, but it seems obvious that one reason for the anti-college trend is the wokism that has infected virtually all colleges and universities. Higher education is now, in most cases, a hostile environment for young men, and it is rapidly becoming a hostile environment for normal people, generally. So why should most kids–the ones who aren’t going to be doctors, engineers, and a handful of other occupations–shell out a lot of money for a poor education?
Monday, March 20, 2023
Really courageous …
In a letter Lanham wrote to his wife, he described Hemingway: “He is probably the bravest man I have ever known, with an unquenchable lust for battle and adventure.” So much for Hemingway being a coward. Lanham also confirms that Hemingway did indeed fight alongside his troops while under heavy attack.
This is surely worrisome …
Pornography addiction is spreading throughout North America at a terrifying rate, leaving in its wake truncated careers, disintegrated marriages, and ruined lives. It knows not the barriers of age, race, religion or sex. And the situation is not going to get better soon because high cash returns continue to line the porn king's pockets and fuel the spread of the smut.
Something to think on …
Sunday, March 19, 2023
In case you wondered …
Examine the evidence …
We have … more sources for Jesus than we do for either Socrates or Alexander the Great. Not only are there four biographical accounts of Jesus (Matthew, Mark, Luke, John), all likely written within 30-60 years of Jesus’ life, but there are letters written by Paul that are even earlier, as well as citations by non-biblical sources such as Josephus, Tacitus, Pliny the Younger, Seutonius, and the emperor Trajan (among others). By contrast, the earliest biography we have for Alexander the Great is over four hundred years after he lived.
See also: CHINESE EVIDENCE OF JESUS’ BIRTH, DEATH AND RESURRECTION (from the time of Christ).
Something to think on …
In case you wondered …
… woke ideas positively encourage paranoid habits of mind which are analogous to those exhibited by people suffering from depression, anxiety, and other psychological disorders. Looking at the world through woke lenses leads one to see oppression and injustice even where they do not exist, to feel strongly aggrieved at this imagined oppression and injustice, and then to treat the narrative of grievance that results as if it were confirming evidence of the reality of the imagined oppression and injustice.
Saturday, March 18, 2023
I get this …
Redrawing the map would require much more than fresh cartography. Logistical challenges grow more thorny with each new question: Would people in eastern Oregon be ready to embrace a sales tax? How would Idaho, which bans legal marijuana, manage eastern Oregon’s thriving weed industry? How would the states transition eastern Oregon’s state employees, with some benefits already earned, to a new retirement system with different rules and compensation?
Here in Pennsylvania, the problem is getting Philly — and maybe parts of adjacent counties — to secede.
I love it …
My favorite St. patrick’s Day is the one when my beloved first wife and I went to Irish club in Mount Airy. We’re sitting at the bar. There is a great band playing great Irish songs Just before they finish they ask if anyone has a final. I immediately say, ‘How about ‘God Save the Queen’? The place goes silent. My wife leans over and says, “Why the hell would you say that?” Unperturbed, I said to the others at the bar, “I thought we were Irish, and had a sense of humor.’ Whereupon we all laughed, and one guy said, “ You’re a wise ass, right?’ Isaid, ‘I fear so.’ We all left as friends.
Yeah, like Joe really knows about this …
Hmm …
Porn has never done much for me. I’ve always preferred real live sex. But I remember going with a friend of mine — a clinical psychologist — to see Deep Throat, which was the first pirn flick to make regular theaters. Well, after half an hour I got the idea and turned to Dave to ask if he had seen enough. He was sound asleep.I also used to sometimes go to hooker bars with a friend (a physician no less, but a great person and a great doctor). I got along with the girls and they loved talking to me — precisely because I made it made I wasn’t a potential customer.Maybe I’m weird. Maybe it’s because I have three daughters. But I just never turned on to the idea of sex as a commodity. And by the way, I may be 81, but women still like me.One other thing: Lots of the guys behind porn are creeps.
Good for them …
Something to think on …
It’s true here, too …
Someone who knows …
My message to those individuals who hung the flyer and everyone else who agrees with its message is clear: Before you advocate for socialism here, try experiencing it somewhere else. You will not find the utopia you are searching for.
Friday, March 17, 2023
I fear ‘tis so …
In the secular press the narrative of Francis as a great reformer was established early on, and as contrary evidence has emerged, the response has often been a decorous silence. It’s been mostly left to his conservative critics to compile the lists of clerics accused of abuse who have been given favorable treatment by this pontiff; or to harp on the failures of financial reform and the absence of any obvious renewal in the pews; or to point out that a pontificate that once promised to make the church less self-referential, less inward-focused, has instead produced a decade of bitter internal arguments and widening theological divisions — while Catholicism’s official verbiage is received with conspicuous indifference by the wider world.
Something to think on …
Thursday, March 16, 2023
More winners …
That’s for sure …
… the overwhelming majority of abusers in the clergy abuse scandal were homosexual men. Thus the hypocrisy of the Post in its March 9 report – a news organization that reveled in trashing the Catholic Church for its patterns of clergy sexual abuse – is thick enough to rival the Antarctic ice pack. Illicit homosexual behavior in the priesthood has no claim to “privacy”. . .or moral integrity.
Lest anyone accuse me of being homophobic, they should know that a friend I shared power of attorney for a gay couple, both of whom would have agreed with this article.
Appreciation …
There’s … a haunting, haunted quality to Coulette’s story, an early success who went silent too soon. “Henri’s death troubles me: the collapse of what began as a bright career as a poet, and his complete isolation at the end,” wrote his onetime friend and Writers’ Workshop colleague Robert Dana in the New York Times after Coulette’s death; Dana, who alludes to Coulette’s issues with drinking and depression, makes a point of including that he’d been found “in a chair; alone.”
The new McCarthyism …
Something to think on …
Wednesday, March 15, 2023
Cause for doubt …
In the giraffe’s case, a bit of reasoning goes a long way. Blind evolution doesn’t look ahead and coordinate a group of changes for some future advantage. It’s blind and must proceed by one small useful step at a time. No evolutionist, for instance, believes that a small number of mega-mutations turned a land mammal into a whale.
See also Giving Up Darwin.
It’s come to this …
I am … taken aback by people who know no more about meteorology than I do, and less about the mathematics of functions with more than two or three variables, and a lot less about history and geography, but who are so certain of some meteorological prediction, they are ready to call you a knave, an idiot, or a perfect madman if you decline to agree.
Q&A …
(Hat tip, Dave Lull.)… Ikiru had a profound impact on me. I grew up as a teenager and a student thinking about that film, it’s message. It meant a lot to me at that age, when you’re trying to figure out what’s the meaning of life. How do you lead a meaningful life? Especially if it doesn’t seem realistic as it didn’t at that point in my existence, that I’d have anything other than a fairly straightforward humble middle class life, working in some office somewhere.
Something to think on …
Tuesday, March 14, 2023
Hmm …
Maybe we should finish what President Polk started: conquer Mexico.
Another scam probably …
I have not been vaxxed. But I have been tested mucho times. My wife has been in and out of hospitals, rehabs, and assisted living facilities. To visit her I had to be tested. Always negative. I’ve also never had the flu. I have a good immune system, and I’m sure in hell not taking a vaccine that took less than two years to be approved.
Good for him …
“Gender ideology, today, is one of the most dangerous ideological colonizations,” Francis said in the interview published on the evening of March 10.
So to speak …
I’m no spring chicken. When I took Spanish in junior-high school, back in the Nixon era, learning new words was as easy as binging on potato chips. In later years, other languages came harder. And these days it seems nearly impossible.