| Core: noun, the most important part of a thing, the essence; from the Latin cor, meaning heart. |
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| Needless Commentary from Small-Town America |
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The Weblog at The View from the Core - Monday, January 20, 2003
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Unitarian Universalism? I have been trying for a while to think how to ask this question delicately. Here goes. Are Unitarian Universalists really the sociopathic psychotics portrayed here? That's the best I could do. (See In the Bowels of Hell: The servants of Moloch.) Lane Core Jr. CIW P Mon. 01/20/03 10:46:29 PM |
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"Who Funds the Left?" By Radley Balko. At FOX last Thursday: A reader of this column e-mailed an interesting question a few months ago: "We hear all about Richard Mellon Scaife," he wrote, "but we never hear about who funds the left. Who's bankrolling the vast left-wing conspiracy?" It's an interesting question, and you'll probably be surprised at the answer.... Lane Core Jr. CIW P Mon. 01/20/03 08:14:45 AM |
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Density's Child! I do have clever readers. Re: Congratulations to Sheryl Crow! After glancing at last night's Golden Globe Awards, I have decided that Beyonce Knowles (Destiny's Child) has a much more readable chest than Sheryl Crow (Density's Child). Even though there were but flowers, and no words, printed on the chemise of the aforementioned Ms K. Lane Core Jr. CIW P Mon. 01/20/03 07:57:14 AM |
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Yet More From the Latest City Journal NRO's Stanley Kurtz takes a look at some of the possibilities for the future of Iraq: After the war, what kind of government should the U.S. seek for post-Saddam Iraq? Foreign-policy experts are divided. As long as the new rulers don’t sponsor terror against us, one argument goes, nothing else matters. If they are autocrats, but friendly autocrats, fine. The other view holds that we can guarantee our long-term security only by forcibly democratizing Iraq, and eventually other Middle Eastern tyrannies, just as we brought democracy to defeated Japan after World War II. Given the dangers of nuclear proliferation and terror, a freedom-loving, democratic, and prosperous Middle East is essential to our future safety, in this view — no real democracies have ever gone to war with each other, after all, and we saw on September 11 what harm the citizens of “friendly” Arab autocracies can inflict on us. But if we do decide to try to impose democracy on Iraq, it will be far harder than proponents of democratization recognize. It will entail long, unremitting U.S. effort. Pushed too fast, it could aggravate communal strife, or even usher in Islamic dictatorship. In the end, I haven’t decided if that effort will be worth it. But before we commit ourselves, we had better be quite clear about what we are getting into.... And Theodore Dalrymple writes on Shakespeare, with an extended analysis of Macbeth: .... Shakespeare knew something that we are increasingly loath to acknowledge. There is no technical fix for the problems of humanity. Those problems, he knew, are ineradicably rooted in our nature; and he atomized that nature with a characteristic genius never since equaled: which is why every time we moderns consult his works, we come away with a deeper insight into the heart of our own mystery.... Lane Core Jr. CIW P Mon. 01/20/03 07:38:42 AM |
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Third Day of Church Unity Octave Please pray! See previous blogs:
Lane Core Jr. CIW P Mon. 01/20/03 07:07:07 AM |
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