The Puritanical Feminist

 

SAM writes:

The article you quote about women who find casual sex unsatisfying is illustrative of a moral outlook that exhibits all of the worst traits associated with the illiberal “vice” of “Puritanism.” The term “Puritanism” as liberals use it is difficult to define, but it often means something equivalent to “willingness to inflict or allow gratuitous pain and suffering in the interests of some trivial moral aim.” And here we have feminists exhibiting it in spades. (more…)

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Man-Made Religion vs. God-Made Religion

 

FROM a talk by the nineteenth-century priest Fr. Arnold Damen, S.J.:

In the sixteenth century Protestantism did away with the authority of the Church and constituted every man his own judge of the Bible, and what was the consequence?  Religion upon religion, church upon church, sprang into existence, and has never stopped springing up new churches, to this day.  When I gave my Mission in Flint, Michigan, I invited, as I have done here, my Protestant friends to come and see me.  A good and intelligent man came to me and said:

“I will avail myself of this opportunity to converse with you.”

“What Church do you belong to, my friend,”  said I.

“To the Church of the Twelve Apostles,”  said he.

“Ha! ha!”  said I, “I belong to that Church too.  But, tell me, my friend, where was your Church started?”

“In Terre Haute, Indiana,”  says he.

“Who started the Church, and who were the Twelve Apostles, my friend?”  said I.

“They were twelve farmers,”  said he; “we all belonged to the same Church, the Presbyterian, but we quarreled with our preacher, separated from him, and started a Church of our own.” (more…)

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Evil Depends Upon the Good

  "We must remember that if all the manifestly good men were on one side and all the manifestly bad men on the other, there would be no danger of anyone, least of all the elect, being deceived by lying wonders. It is the good men, good once, we must hope good still, who are to do the work of Anti-Christ and so sadly to crucify the Lord afresh…. Bear in mind this feature of the last days, that this deceitfulness arises from good men being on the wrong side." ---   Fr. Frederick Faber, Sermon for Pentecost Sunday, 1861

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The Sexual Revolution Isn’t Even Fun

  FEMINISTS have yet to figure out a way to make impersonal, dehumanizing sexual encounters "equal." Men seem to have more fun. Why is this so? One sex expert offers her opinion: Part of the problem ... is that women still may be stigmatized for having casual sex. The idea that women are "stigmatized" for having casual sex is just plain laughable. In fact, they are stigmatized for not having casual sex. But a sex expert is not a rational creature. In her eyes, even though women are not, on the most basic animal level, enjoying casual sex, they should be encouraged to have more casual sex. The world of sex science is not scientific at all. It is grounded in superstition.

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When Wives Are Wife-Beaters Too

 

ALEX writes:

The keepers of the Revolution are trying to figure out how to deal with the astonishing rates of “domestic” abuse among cohabitating homosexuals and lesbians. That’s a real problem when there is no straight male to be the a priori guilty party.

(more…)

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The Inexhaustible Wealth of the Spirit

  Such are the inexhaustible riches of the spirit that they can be the property of all and yet satisfy the desires of each. Indeed, only then do we possess a truth completely when we teach it to others, when we make others share our contemplation; only then do we truly love a virtue when we wish others to love it also; only then do we wholly love God when we desire to make Him loved by all. Give money away, or spend it, and it is no longer yours. But give God to others, and you possess Him more fully for yourself. We may go even further and say that, if we desired only one soul to be deprived of Him, if we excluded only one soul -- even the soul of one who persecutes and calumniates us -- from our own love, then God Himself would be lost to us. --- Reginald Garrigou-Lagrange, The Three Ways in the Spiritual Life

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Fundraising

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In Defense of Fruitcake

 

Paradise Inc., is the nation's largest producer of candied fruit and peels.
Paradise Inc., in Plant City, Fla., is the nation’s largest producer of candied fruit and peels.

JANE S. writes:

This is the season when my mother and I undertake our annual ritual of producing one of the most hated things on earth: fruitcake. If you’ve ever looked at that luridly colored candied fruit in the stores and wondered “who buys that stuff?”—it’s us. The only time I have ever had a supermarket clerk make wisecracks about my groceries, it was when I was buying ingredients to make fruitcake. Fruitcake-hatred is passed down as a family tradition. People are taught to hate it even if they’ve never tried it.

Fruitcake is so ancient, its origins are unclear. There are stories that the Egyptians and Sumerians packed it away in tombs for people to enjoy in the next world. Roman soldiers are said to have carried fruitcake on military campaigns and medieval knights took fruitcake along on Crusades. One wonders how something so hated has managed to survive for such a long time. (more…)

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Two Mothers, Two Different Worlds

 

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Stacy Keyte and her family

 

DON VINCENZO writes:

Last week, we buried the choir director in our small church cemetery in northern Virginia. For the funeral Mass, which was said in the Traditional Latin Rite, there was not an empty seat in our church, and not too many dry eyes either as the pastor gave his homily praising this magnificent woman and mother who died unexpectedly one month after her 50th birthday. She left eight children, ranging in ages from seven to 25.

I had known Cheryl Kraus for the 17 years that my wife and I have attended St. Athanasius Church, during which time she directed the choir, but she was far more than that. She was a veritable force of God’s Nature. (more…)

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Storm Myths, cont.

 

HERE’S a good piece by Benny Peiser of The Spectator. Peiser writes:

According to news reports, Typhoon Haiyan, which struck the Philippines a few days ago, is now overshadowing the UN climate summit in Warsaw. Some delegates and climate campaigners have been quick to suggest that global warming was to blame for this disaster.

Nothing could be further from the truth. (more…)

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An Image of Obamacare

  AT Reclaiming Beauty, Kidist Paulos Asrat writes in an entry about Todd Park that the image that pops up the most frequently when googling Obamacare, or Affordable Care Act, is the one above. She writes: I don't understand the juxtaposition of the young Asian woman with the older one, which clearly shows a mother and a daughter. Why not the father as well, or a husband for the younger woman? Why two generations of Asian women? Still, this shows that Asians have become a strong participants in government-initiated programs. This deflates the myth of the financially secure, independent minded Asian, and exposes them as entitlement seekers. Asian-Americans happen to be the highest-earning group in the U.S., out-earning whites, and they generally place enormous emphasis on family. A perfect fit for Republicans, no? No. Asians voted for Obama by 73-26 [in the 2012 elections]; they were more Democratic than Hispanics. [Source: Asian Voters Send a Message to Republicans]

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Politicizing Storms

 

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WHAT is the normal person’s reaction to a devastating storm in a distant country, a storm that has swept thousands of helpless people out to sea and flattened hundreds of thousands of homes? The normal person prays for the comfort of the afflicted. The normal person sends a check to a relief organization. The normal person reflects on the fragility of life and the vanity of all things.

But, when a major storm devastates a region, as Typhoon Haiyan has done in the Philippines, the liberal views the catastrophe in light of his political agenda. The storm must be the result of evil Westerners who drive cars. Never mind that this past hurricane season in the Atlantic was uneventful. The liberal never proclaims when storms aren’t happening that catastrophic scenarios related to global warming have been disproved. For the liberal, mankind and life itself are perfectible. Thus even storms are someone’s fault. Curiously, he does not ever seem to entertain the possibility that some storms may be more devastating than they need be because of corrupt or inept officials who allow overbuilding in fragile zones.

Here is a risks assessment map put out by the UN in 2011 which stated that Tacloban, the city hit especially hard by Haiyan, had a 10 percent chance of just such a storm in the next ten years.

According to Science Insider:

Haiyan is the fifth Category 5 storm (the top category) on Earth so far in 2013, Masters says. The global average since 2000 has been 4.4 Category 5s per year, and the record was set in 1997 with 12 of them. September’s massive assessment from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) found only “low confidence” that intense tropical cyclone activity had increased measurably since 1950.

Also:

The IPCC found that, “more likely than not,” global warming will drive an increase in intense tropical cyclone activity in the western North Pacific and North Atlantic by late in this century.

The possibility of somewhat stronger storms is a serious concern and the moral necessity of reducing man-made emissions is indisputable, but one must bear in mind the size and complexity of the atmosphere and the limits of human power.

(more…)

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Conclusive Proof that the Catholic Church Is the One True Church

  MY Protestant brethren have been roughed up here in recent days. I realize this leads nowhere and we must strive for unthinking, ecumenical harmony. I will try to behave. I promise I will, but before I do, I would just like to offer indisputable proof of a few points that have been made in favor of the Church. In this photo of the Man Who Would Be Pope, we see all the glory, majesty and infallibility of the Catholic Revelation. If you need help finding a Catholic church near you, just let me know.

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When Men Were Men, and Mothers Were Mothers

 

Scan 39

IN commemoration of Veterans Day, here is a repost of a World War I letter from my maternal grandfather, who volunteered to serve with the British medical corps. My grandfather died years later from injuries sustained in the war.

Dearest Mother,

I happened to see in the Paris paper that Sunday, the 12th is Mother’s Day and that we might celebrate by writing to our Mothers, such letters to receive special consideration in the mails. So these are my thoughts to you Mother mine.

You must know it is not necessary for me to have a special day in which to remember you, for in my thoughts every day is Mother’s Day and many are the spaces of the day and the restless moments of the night that I think of Mother and of home and how much I wish I could see them both. (more…)

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The Holodomor

 

Ukraine-Memorial-Holodomor
Holodomor Memorial (Kyiv, Ukraine)

THIS month, Ukrainians will observe the 80th anniversary of the Holodomor, the famine and destruction imposed by the Communists on the independent farmers of the Soviet Ukraine. The famine and the many simultaneous deportations of farmers resulted in an estimated 10 million deaths in a once flourishing agricultural region that was known as the breadbasket of Europe. According to a website run by the Connecticut Holodomor Awareness Committee:

In Soviet Ukraine, of course, the Holodomor was kept out of official discourse until the late 1980’s, shortly before Ukraine won its independence in 1991. With the fall of the Soviet Union, previously inaccessible archives, as well as the long suppressed oral testimony of Holodomor survivors living in Ukraine, have yielded massive evidence offering incontrovertible proof of Ukraine’s tragic famine genocide of the 1930’s.

On November 28th 2006, the Verkhovna Rada (Parliament of Ukraine) passed a decree defining the Holodomor as a deliberate Act of Genocide. Although the Russian government continues to call Ukraine’s depiction of the famine a “one-sided falsification of history,” it is recognized as genocide by approximately two dozen nations, and is now the focus of considerable international research and documentation.

Here is one’s survivor’s story.

(more…)

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Armistice Day

 

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SPENCER WARREN writes:

There are a number of moving stories and live links at the BBC website of the commemoration of the 95th anniversary of the Great War armistice. All of Britain stops to observe two minutes of silence at the 11th hour of the 11th day of the 11th month. This and their practice of wearing poppies were abandoned long ago in our country.

The images brought tears to my eyes. This is perhaps the most traditional public ritual still practiced.

On my visits long ago to Harrow and Winchester School, as on public memorials in Britain, I noted how the World War II dead were an appendage to the far greater number of dead from the First World War, or the Great War.

(more…)

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