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The Thinking Housewife
 

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Midterm Elections Saw No Serious Demographic Shifts

November 13, 2014

 

THE Republicans can only win a presidential race by becoming more and more like the Democrats, while somehow signaling through image-making to their traditional supporters that they are really not like the Democrats. That is the obvious conclusion to be drawn from recent history, including the 2014 midterm elections. The recent GOP triumph was largely due to lower voter turnout among the young. See Selwyn Duke’s analysis at The American Thinker.

 

Population Control News

November 13, 2014

 

SOPHIA writes:

I’ve wanted to send you a news story that I only saw reported at Life Site News and Natural News and certainly not in the mainstream media. Catholic doctors in Kenya reported that six samples of a tetanus vaccine being given to up to 2.3 million women in Kenya were found to be spiked with a chemical that induces abortion for up to three years. The latter source makes it out to be race-based genocide, but I think that’s a stretch; population control is obviously not. These vaccines are being pushed by the UN and the World Health Organization.

 

D.C. Suburb Strikes Christmas from School Calendar

November 12, 2014

 

ACCORDING to The Washington Post:

Christmas and Easter have been stricken from next year’s school calendar in Montgomery County. So have Yom Kippur and Rosh Hashanah.

Montgomery’s Board of Education voted 7 to 1 Tuesday to eliminate references to all religious holidays on the published calendar for 2015-2016, a decision that followed a request from Muslim community leaders to give equal billing to the Muslim holy day of Eid al-Adha.

Read More »

 

Picasso’s Misogyny

November 12, 2014

 

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Weeping Woman with Handkerchief, Picasso; 1937

IT’S interesting that feminists have so often condemned the art traditions of the West for their supposed exclusion of women artists of genius even though those traditions produced millions of enchantingly beautiful realistic portraits of women, filled with character and depth. Do feminists in academia or the art world express any revulsion for the depiction of women by modern artists even when it dehumanizes them? I am not aware of any.

As E. Michael Jones writes in Degenerate Moderns, perhaps with a touch of overstatement:

“Picasso’s mutilations of the female body bespeak the modern version of human sacrifice; they presage simultaneously in a visual way the concentration camp, the abortion clinic, and the pornographic film, and may well have helped pave the way for all three.”

In his private life, Picasso frequently became infatuated and then disgusted with the objects of his infatuation, such as the photographer Dora Maar, who was the subject of, “Weeping Woman,” above. In addition to his Cubist portraits, he created realistic images of the women discarded, such as the pencil drawing below of Maar, but these are not the pictures for which he is most famous. It’s not surprising that Picasso’s pictures of spliced and hacked female faces were acclaimed and found an enthralled audience given the simultaneous rise of feminine self-loathing.

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More People Wake Up to Papal Pretender

November 12, 2014

 

Pope-Francis-World-Youth-Day

AN ITALIAN CATHOLIC has posted a petition online, addressed to the “Cardinals of the Roman Church,” requesting the removal of the phony-baloney Marxist “Pope Francis” from the papacy. The elegantly-worded petition states:

[I]t remains a theological truth of the divine law and ecclesiology, that no one who seeks to harm the Church in anything essential, such as Her fidelity to Christ’s Magisterium, can be in communion with Her … 

Any such act by the Modernist cardinals to depose Francis is extremely unlikely (and the Cardinals do not have the authority to depose a pope.) In the meantime, Jorge Bergoglio is not, by virtue of his defection from the Faith, the pope. He is an impostor, who continues his revolutionary agenda at a breathtaking pace, with his wacky homilies denying the existence of God and extolling evolution and dictatorial decrees against Catholics such as the excommunication of anyone who receives sacraments from the traditionalist Society of Saint Pius X. As a commenter at one blog put it, “all the kooks and idiots are crawling out of the woodwork to jump into the lap of this pope.” Here’s one example.

 

The Model Minority: Exit Poll Edition

November 12, 2014

 

ANTI-GLOBALIST EXPATRIATE writes:

Asians still vote overwhelmingly Democratic in U.S. elections, flawed exit polls aside. See The Washington Post’s analysis of the widely circulated rumor that Asians voted heavily Republican in the recent midterm elections.

 

Anything for Attention

November 11, 2014

 

THE New York City Fire Department may have found a way to achieve sexual equality.

The solution is to pretend men are women.

Read More »

 

November 11, 2014

 

Flowers in a Glass Vase, John Constable; 1814

Flowers in a Glass Vase, John Constable; 1814

 

“The Selfishness of Sperm Donation”

November 11, 2014

 

CHRISTOPHER WHITE writes:

A recent essay in The New York Times tells the story of a lesbian couple in Brooklyn who used the sperm of one of their friends in California to conceive their son.

By happenstance, the sperm donor and his wife became pregnant shortly thereafter, and the writer cheerfully claims that it was their Californian friends’ willingness to serve as a donor that brought about good karma in the birth of their own child—or as the title of column states, “It Was in Giving That They Received.”

Read More »

 

Esolen on Abortion

November 11, 2014

 

ANTHONY ESOLEN writes of “the economics of abortion“:

What is abortion among us but an economic deal? We purchase our hedonism, and our economic latitude, with the blood of the children we do not want. That is it, and with only a few exceptions, it is the whole of it.

 

The Collapse of Authority

November 8, 2014

 

TEXANNE writes:

As Mrs. H. points out in your recent post:  “Students have no respect for teachers; teachers have no authority over students, and in fact fear them. “

The same can be said for the feminist dad in your recent post.  He seems to believe that it is somehow manly to allow his child to make the decisions, while his role is simply to support her choices — with force if necessary.

The tragic fact of “feminist fathers” (and teachers as buddies) is that so many of them were raised by fathers who themselves had lost moral authority in their own families — having lost connection with their only source of authority, namely The Father.  It is likely that their parents were loving and dutiful and generous, and as children they were raised “correctly”, according to cultural expectations and with a certain degree of respect for parental authority and elders in general.

Read More »

 

Come to Cleveland

November 8, 2014

 

JEWEL A. writes:

Your link to Reclaiming Beauty’s article on Cleveland made me think of the trend in photographing dying cities, namely Detroit and Philadelphia, and the beautiful ruins left behind after years of fiscal mismanagement. Even in ruins, so much of what was once beautiful stands as a silent condemnation of the present culture that espouses ugliness.

Here’s a hastily made tourism video inviting you to visit Cleveland.

 

Images of Cleveland and Pittsburgh

November 7, 2014

 

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The Board of Education building in Cleveland

AT Reclaiming Beauty, Kidist Paulos Asrat has posted fall images of Cleveland and Pittsburgh.

 

Female Teachers Who Seduce Students

November 7, 2014

 

MATTHEW H. writes:

I have wanted to ask you this question for some time but have deliberately avoided doing so.  It’s an unpleasant, sordid subject, and I try to uplift people instead of causing them to dwell on the negative.  But the curiosity is killing me!

Here is the question:  what explains the recent phenomenon of female schoolteachers who engage in sexual intercourse with their teenaged students?  This phenomenon started, as best I can remember, with Mary Kay Letourneau in the late 1990’s.  But in the past four or five years the trend appears to have really picked up steam, and each day seems to bring a new scandal involving a female teacher and a male student.  Why do these women do It? What are they thinking?  What is motivating them?

Read More »

 

On Theistic Evolution

November 7, 2014

 

Editorial_cartoon_depicting_Charles_Darwin_as_an_ape_(1871)

MIKE writes:

Maybe it’s a sign of a deep spiritual deficit, but I’ve never understood the point of view that the idea of a universe created by God is mutually exclusive to the idea of biological evolution. For the people who strictly put their belief in evolution, the theory isn’t and never will be broad enough to rule out a divinely created world or a personally interested God. The people that strictly put their belief in creationism overlook the fact that evolutionary theory has been accurate enough to make useful predictions about the world we live in. I’d be interested to read your thoughts on how and if it’s possible to reconcile the two opposing points of view.

Read More »

 

November 6, 2014

 

Sicut cervus desiderat ad fontes aquarum,
ita desiderat anima mea ad te, Deus.

As a hart longs for the flowing streams,
so longs my soul for thee, O God.

—- Psalm 42: 1

 

Joni Ernst, Farm Girl and Soldier

November 6, 2014

 

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Joni Ernst, middle

FRED OWENS writes:

I am keenly interested in your reaction to the election of Joni Ernst to the Senate from Iowa.

Her motto was “Soldier, Mother, Conservative.” She changed that slogan to “Soldier, Mother, Independent Leader,” on the advice of her pollsters.

She often mentions her farm background, especially the castration of pigs. To me she seems to be the perfect image of the castrating female, stridently astride her motorcycle. I will not be so unkind as to use the B word, but how else to describe her?

Some of her views might coincide with what you advocate, but I doubt that you approve of her presentation.

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  Read More »

 

… And Then There Was 1964

November 4, 2014

ALAN writes:

Last month I attended the 50-year reunion of my eighth-grade class from 1964. It was organized by a few dedicated classmates and took place in a lovely park on a beautiful autumn day. Fifty years had gone by since I had seen or spoken with any of those classmates. For four hours that afternoon, I thought I had died and gone to heaven.

We attended a Catholic school in south St. Louis. That parish and the neighborhood around it were a decent and often wonderful place to live, play, grow up, and attend church and school. Our class included 80 to 90 children.  Not nearly that many came to the reunion. Some live in other states. A few have died. Read More »