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The Thinking Housewife
 

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A Conservative Speaks on Faith and Politics

July 8, 2010

 

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Australian Conservative leader Tony Abbott

TONY ABBOTT, Australia’s Conservative Opposition leader who will be running against Prime Minister Julia Gillard in an upcoming election, stated today that it was unfair for voters to consider Gillard’s atheism on election day. “[Faith] is a personal thing,” Abbott said in an ABC Radio interview. “Just as my Catholicism should not be held against me, her views or lack of views on the subject should not be held against her.”

Did you ever read a more stunningly oblivious statement by a politican before? Why, even atheists believe their faith matters.

Christianity and atheism. These are two different faiths, that’s all, sort of like whether you drink Coke or iced tea.

“I have never ever let religion dictate politics because decisions that are made by politicians in a secular, pluralist democracy like Australia have got to be driven by what are objective, standard, ordinary commonsense considerations,” Abbott said. Objective, standard, ordinary, commonsense: these are pre-existent and unquestioned, matters of faith we will not call matters of faith. 

Whether life has meaning, God exists or our actions have any consequences, these have no bearing on what is objective, standard and ordinary. Abbott deserves to lose against his radical socialist opponent. At least she is faithful to her beliefs, changing what she believes to suit the moment, believing in expedience and will. Read More »

 

On Admiration

July 7, 2010

 

Behold

Who told how countless stars congregate?
When light competes with light,
There are so few.
One, two, three.
One night in California,
I saw eighty drop onto the hills.
Four, five, six.
But visibility takes the seen.
Darkness gives the unseen.
In this vast and intimate ceiling,
Once I saw one.
Seven, eight, nine.
Gratitude always was and always will be.
Consider it
An enumerating thing.
Ten, eleven, twelve.
May there ever be stars uncounted,
One, two, three,
These gifts we never view.

                           — Laura Wood                       

 

 

Survey of Women Reveals Double Standards

July 7, 2010

 

WOMEN in Great Britain are perhaps growing wise to the relentless propaganda of recent years. The annual Social Attitudes Survey shows a significant increase in the number of women who want to remain home with their children and be married to men who are the breadwinners. According to The Daily Mail, in 1998, only 21 percent of British women thought family life would suffer if mothers worked full time. By 2006, the number had risen to 37 percent.

Still the statistics are grim. According to the survey, only 17 percent of women with children under four said men and women should have different family roles. In contrast, 40 percent of women thought so in 1986.

Here’s the bottom line about these surveys. If asked whether they want a man to support them, women will say yes. If asked whether women should be mainly responsible for child-rearing and home, they will say no. They want to have everything at once.

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The Private Revolutions of Teenage Boys

July 7, 2010

 

TEENAGE BOYS sometimes become suddenly bored and apathetic with school. This indifference does not afflict girls as often and there are numerous possible causes for it. For one, high school allows little opportunity for the sort of mastery or obsessiveness that appeals to boys. There are too many classes in too many subjects.

Gary North looks at the subject in this article and offers some suggestions. A teenage boy, if at all possible, should focus on something that interests him. Parents should give him the chance, within reason, to make his own way and his own mistakes.  

Here is the article:

If Your Teenage Son Is Not Doing Well at School, Consider My Strategy of Recovery
Gary North

There are a lot of reasons — good reasons — why teenage boys do poorly in school. I hope your under-performing son has one of them.

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Contraceptives, Abortion and Breast Cancer

July 6, 2010

 

THE SHOCKING silence of the mainstream media regarding the link between the birth control pill and breast cancer is explored in this episode of the Michael Coren Show. See the segment (at 23 minutes) which features Dr. Angela LanFranchi, of the Breast Cancer Prevention Institute. Studies have shown that both abortion and oral contraceptives are what is known as Group One carcinogens for breast, cervical and liver cancer. Tobacco is a Group One carcinogen for lung cancer.

LanFranchi, a breast surgeon and professor at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, says the prescription of oral contraceptives to teenagers amounts to “child abuse.”

“You take a very intricate system, the endocrine system… and you throw a Group One carcinogen onto those healthy women what could you expect but disease?” she said.

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Australia’s Top Feminist

July 6, 2010

 

JULIA GILLARD became Australia’s first woman prime minister last month in a parliamentary ambush of the unpopular Labor leader Kevin Rudd. Will she be an inspiring model for women, especially if she is elected soon by popular vote? It’s very unlikely. Feminists in power are often walking advertisements for traditional roles.

The 48-year-old Gillard is childless and lives with her boyfriend, who is her former hairdresser. She presents a realistic image of the practical implications of feminism and socialism. She is the modern female eunuch. By contrast, Sarah Palin, who is attractive, the mother of five, and married to a good-looking man, sells the feminist dream, which is not to reject femininity but to have the advantages of being both a woman and a man at once.

The Labor Party, by the way, has a rule that 35 percent of its parliamentary seats must be reserved for women. This sort of blatant favoritism never seems to embarrass feminists.

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Julia Gillard and her boyfriend, Tom Mathieson

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The Sound Barrier

July 6, 2010

 

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DAVID LEAN’S 1952 movie The Sound Barrier, about test pilots attempting to exceed the speed of sound, captures the beauty and grandeur of aviation in black-and-white images of lone machines soaring above the earth and penetrating magnificent bulwarks of clouds. Thomas Bertonneau argues here that it is “the finest aviation film ever.” As he notes, the film is also a compelling and sensitive examination of one woman’s honest struggle with her deep-seated view that women are morally superior to men. Exploring the natural barrier between the sexes, the movie is sympathetic to the feminine idea that security and loyalty come first, but it ultimately defends masculinity, risk and danger. I highly recommend it and Bertonneau’s excellent analysis of the film.

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The Thinking Woman’s Dilemma

July 6, 2010

 

ENNA writes:

I have recently discovered both the “manosphere” and the small number of anti-feminist blogs. While I disagree with some of the writings at both types of blogs, most of what is written has forced me to confront and deepen my conception of human nature, and I am glad of it. I have come to realize more (although I was already aware to some extent) the differences between men and women, and the general strengths and weaknesses that each sex possesses. However, I encounter some confusion when I try to apply these principles to myself. In your recent post, “Men are Slow to Ripen,” you wrote:

I used to be baffled by why men seem so much slower at housework. I now think this is a major reason. They are trying to figure out a system, like a boy building a castle with Legos. They are architects, not housekeepers. Most women, even those who are extremely neat, don’t create abstract plans as they work. If they were domestic strategists, the world would fall apart within a matter of hours. Similar disaster would ensue from the failure of men to conceptualize. Read More »

 

The Feminine Eye

July 5, 2010

 

MERCEDES writes:

I enjoy reading The Thinking Housewife very much, and appreciate your defense of traditional values and morality. I discovered your website through my favorite traditionalist website, Lawrence Auster’s View from the Right. I read both of them on a daily basis.

I hope you won’t find my question frivolous, but I have always wondered what the eye on your masthead signifies, if anything.  Perhaps, with apologies to Freud, “Sometimes an eye is just an eye.” Read More »

 

Is All Fair in Love and War?

July 4, 2010

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 BUCK O. writes:

Happy Fourth of July. 

I’m a former Marine Sgt. (40 years ago this September), who occasionally peruses U.S. Marine news. I came across this article and almost immediately thought to send it to you. (Your website is like a drink of cool water during a forced march through the desert). I’m not sure what to think about this married couple. I’m a tad jealous and also troubled. Their story is described as a classic romance. Hopefully they go home together and begin their family. 

I remember what was always said about marriage when I was in the Marines. “If the Marine Corps wanted you to have a wife, they would have issued you one.” Sounds cold, but it made clear the answer to any questions about commitment. This circumstance seems to be about as close as you can get to a literal wife/husband being issued by the Marine Corps. What preoccupies the minds of each of these Marines, in the throes of romance, when they hear of each other in the throes of battle? How can this further the mission of the United States Marine Corps and strengthen a weakening America? 

How does a nation constitute and maintain a force of warriors (McChrystal?) and also blend them in with it’s liberal society and culture?

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Hendrick Avercamp

July 4, 2010

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THE DUTCH painter Hendrick Avercamp depicted captivating winter scenes of skaters on the frozen canals and waterways of 17th Century Netherlands. Falling into the same tradition of Flemish landscape painting begun by Bruegel, he created paintings filled with bright color, brooding skies, and tiny human vignettes.  A small exhibit of his work is on display at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. During a visit to the museum yesterday, I was enthralled by these evocative works with their miniature episodes on ice.

Avercamp (1585-1634) lived and worked in the small port city of Kampen on the Zuider Zee during the period known by meteorologists as the Little Ice Age, when the winters were cold enough to freeze rivers and canals. Bruegel was the first to paint winter landscapes, but Avercamp is considered to be the first to specialize in the genre. Little is known about the painter’s life, but he was possibly mute and deaf, which may account for his striking attention to detail. The paintings seem to contain every variety of gesture and pose, and they depict the full range of social types, from peasants to burghers to aristocrats, all skating, conversing or working on the ice. Up close, one sees a woman overturned in a fall, her skirts askew; a poor peasant carting a wooden box; elegantly dressed figures in black gowns and masks to keep off the cold; a washerwoman working alongside a hole in the ice; fishermen and workers hauling peat; and men playing the ice game of colf, which was a precursor of golf. Skates were metal blades, curling at the end, which were attached to shoes. Read More »

 

Courtship Today

July 2, 2010

 

 

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The Racial Realities of Rape

July 2, 2010

 

LAWRENCE AUSTER writes:

In the wicked days of discrimination, race-conscious white society segregated and oppressed black men in order, among other things, to keep them from raping and killing young white women. In our more virtuous and humane times, race-blind white society commands young white women, in the name of female freedom and empowerment, to behave in ways that will get them raped and murdered by black men.

There is another difference between the two periods: in the old days in the South, society stated plainly why it was segregating black men; in our time, the fact that black men are regularly raping and killing white women, and the fact that white women’s own socially approved and mandated behavior makes such murders infinitely more likely, are never, ever, ever mentioned.

This is not a call to hate black people or to regard all or most black men as dangerous criminals. It is not a call to oppress blacks or return to the days of Jim Crow. It is a call for society to acknowledge certain important realities which are currently being systematically ignored, and to change its attitudes and behaviors accordingly.

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Where There’s Abortion, There’s Fatherlessness

July 2, 2010

 

THE NEW YORK POST reports:

Forty years ago today, New York became the first state in the US where abortion was broadly legal. Since then, New York City has become the nation’s undisputed abortion capital, with an overwhelmingly pro-choice political establishment — and an abortion rate that’s three times the national average.

And a stifling taboo on the subject that chokes off any mature discussion about what such a rate means for the public welfare.

The decline in fatherhood in New York City, as elsewhere, parallels the rise in abortion. As the Post’s John Wilson states:

Thus, an honest discussion would at least entertain the possibility that the easy availability of subsidized abortion weakens the cultural expectation that young men must take responsibility for their offspring.

Instead, New York’s response to the problem of absentee fathers consists entirely of nanny-state facelifts — i.e., Mayor Bloomberg’s just-announced position of Fatherhood Services Coordinator, or “Daddy Czar.”

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Zucchini Pie

July 2, 2010

 

THE WORLD is full of zucchini know-it-alls. These are people who’ve made zucchini bread, stuffed zucchini, grilled zucchini and zucchini matchsticks. They’ve grown zucchini and given it to friends and used it as doorstops. They believe they have explored the zucchini universe to its fullest and that on their death beds, they will not look back at this one area of their lives with any regret.

I would never attempt to tell a zucchini expert what to do with the stuff. Nevertheless, I believe there are a few squash artisans who have never tried this recipe for Tourte aux Courgettes. It is an easy, delicious and somewhat unusual recipe for zucchini pie, which I have made many times. It has Provençal credentials and therefore will instantly transport you to the sunny meadows of that extremely expensive land. It also brings out the subtle flavor of this common summer vegetable. Read More »

 

Sheet-Metal Poetry

July 1, 2010

 

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IN AN article in The Brussels Journal about the interesting genre of aviation movies, Thomas F. Bertonneau writes:

The real interest in aviation cinema lies, however, not in the perfunctory drama, but in the forms and movements of the aircraft themselves and – if one were to place such films in their historical sequence – in the urgent perfection of those forms towards the increasingly abstract. Read More »

 

Should I Be Covering the Oil Spill?

July 1, 2010

 

ANGELA writes:

It seems pretty ironic, but telling, in many ways that a “thinking housewife” seems to be totally sheltered and oblivious to the genocide and slow poisoning that is taking place of women and children on the Gulf Coast of Mexico. Have you, the “thinking housewife” even thought about it? The dead zones, the illness? Any of it? Really, you should be writing about nothing else, if you were actually “thinking.”

Laura writes:

Genocide?

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The Problem with Mr. Darcy

July 1, 2010

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A COUPLE of readers in the Twilight discussion have expressed the opinion that the male vampire hero in the movies and books is no more harmful or unreal than Mr. Darcy, the famous hero of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Leaving aside the obvious problem with comparing the clunky Twilight to the clever characterizations of Austen, I do not think any similarities with Mr. Darcy justify the romantic excesses of Twilight. That’s because Mr. Darcy is a very problematic hero for women.

Darcy is pure fairy tale and yet he is made to seem real. There are no Mr. Darcys in real life and female fascination with this character is unfortunate if it is not conscious of this fact.

I’m not saying that there are no men as intriguingly aloof and strong and interesting as Mr. Darcy. There are. But I think it is fair to say that there are almost no men who are as fantastically wealthy as Mr. Darcy and who yet combine in perfect proportion his arrogance and sensitivity, his haughtiness and emotional delicacy. Mr. Darcy is sublime, but he is one of the most unreal men ever to grace the pages of a minor literary masterpiece.

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