The Renaissance According to NPR

 

N.W. writes:

Despite my conservative views, I still listen to NPR on a regular basis. I really shouldn’t. It often gets me mad. However, I enjoy that NPR gears its programming towards a more intelligent audience.

I really got riled yesterday morning, however, with a piece on an art exhibit in Italy exploring the rise of banking in Florence at the start of the Renaissance. The segment started by describing how the Church’s rules against usury had up until then prevented banks from prospering in Medieval Europe. The exhibit illustrates the way in which “Florentine merchants got around the Catholic Church’s ban on money-lending and bankrolled the Renaissance.” (more…)

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The Mythical Class Divide

 

JESSE POWELL writes:

I have made the point before that there are serious problems with the thesis, put forth last week by Charles Murray, that “the upper class” is doing just fine in its family behaviors while “the lower class” is deteriorating dramatically. It is indeed true that “the upper class” is doing better than “the lower class” but this is merely a class distinction; it does not indicate a cultural divide. The same overall culture has within it people who are “better off” and people who are “worse off” and not surprisingly the people who are “better off” are better off; their social indicators show fewer problems.  (more…)

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From the Trenches of Men’s Studies

 

A CANADIAN “professor of masculinity” proposes the abolition of masculinity. Would you expect otherwise? Marc LaFrance tells The Montreal Gazette:

“The irony is the dominant norms of masculinity, what the academics call hegemonic masculinity – the breadwinner, the guy who never gets scared, the guy who is extremely successful – really make for an unlivable life for men.

“These structures distance men from themselves,” he says. “You can’t be a person who can feel, you can’t be weak, you’re not allowed to be sad, to fail.

(more…)

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The Sinister Inflation of Rape Numbers

 

CHRISTINA HOFF SOMMERS wrote last week on preposterous new rape statistics released by the federal government. The Centers for Disease Control recently announced that thirty percent of women are victims of sexual violence. In The Washington Post, Sommers explained how surveyors came up with this patently absurd number. She wrote: (more…)

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From the Mailbag

  LISA writes: While I would not say it was wise for 16-year-old Laura Dekker to sail solo around the world, I cannot think that she would have been "safer," in the spiritual, cultural, and mental sense of that word, in a public classroom in the Netherlands.

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Charles Murray on Class and Sexual Morality

 

I MISSED many stories last week, including this Wall Street Journal piece by Charles Murray, who points to the now familiar facts of class and family disintegration. He writes:

We have developed a new upper class with advanced educations, often obtained at elite schools, sharing tastes and preferences that set them apart from mainstream America. At the same time, we have developed a new lower class, characterized not by poverty but by withdrawal from America’s core cultural institutions.

Murray’s solution to the explosion of divorce and illegitimacy among the less educated is for America’s elite to express disapproval of those who don’t raise their children in married homes. He never comes right out and says that the elite should vilify promiscuity, but that seems to be his point.

Married, educated people who work hard and conscientiously raise their kids shouldn’t hesitate to voice their disapproval of those who defy these norms. When it comes to marriage and the work ethic, the new upper class must start preaching what it practices.

But his notion that there is a great American divide is problematic. America’s elite does not believe in sexual restraint. It does not believe in traditional sex roles any more than America’s working classes. The well-educated simply suffer less from the consequences of the cultural revolution. How could they possibly preach what they don’t themselves endorse?  (more…)

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Returned at Last

  I WILL be resuming my normal blogging schedule after a busy interlude away from home. I had hoped to post sooner, but unfortunately could not due to happy and exciting events. Here is Domenico Zampieri's The Cumaean Sibyl, a prophetess of the ancient world portrayed as a Renaissance noblewoman with her elegant turban and flowing drapery. Her viola da gamba stands in the background. She would not have so rudely abandoned her audience. Thank you for your patience.

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Stay Tuned

  I HAVE been away from my desk for the last few days and unable to post or respond to all comments. I am also going to be limited in what I can do for the next few days.

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The Pervasive Creed of Radical Autonomy

 

JOSH F. writes:

 Your latest three posts demonstrate the systematic effort to teach, encourage and exalt radical autonomy as the highest value.
 
First, there are the “neutral” schools that are a product of their own values; non-discrimination and tolerance. From such a genuine application of these values results a “neutral” school, which is a school that simply teaches “radical autonomy,” an amoral, asexual, irreligious,  not-anything- in-particular existence.
 
Secondly, there is the parent’s reinforcement of this “radical autonomy.” What we have really learned from this SAIL ALONE around the world by a fourteen-year-old girl is that “radical autonomy” is really easy and consequence-free. That’s the general lesson from the parents. The other message of this event is the emasculation of our sons as great and dangerous endeavours are trivialized and the reinforcing notion that our daughters should “sail alone” in the world. (more…)

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The Opportunities of Abortion

 

JILL FARRIS writes:

I agree with Obama that abortion provides more opportunities for  our daughters; more opportunities for depression, suicide and post-traumatic stress. Abortion provides opportunities for sterility, breast cancer and other lifelong physical complications. Abortion provides women the wonderful opportunity for broken marriages, sorrow, and loneliness.

Abortions provides predators, sexual molesters and evil parents the opportunity to perpetrate evil on our daughters.

Abortion provides the opportunity for us to miss out on creative geniuses who were never born and ordinary people with humble gifts that benefit mankind. Abortion provides us all, mothers, daughters, fathers and sons, with a world that is absent a generation of children who were killed before birth.

(more…)

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On The Myth of Neutral Schools

 

GREG J. writes in response to this entry:

The most insidious part of modern Dewey-ite education is its claim to being morally neutral. All education is moral; that is inevitable. By definition, when you instruct someone, you are claiming to do so from a position of moral authority. No matter what may be claimed by secular humanists in the NEA and the Department of Education, children do not sit down in a classroom, see their teacher, and think to themselves, “Well obviously this person is only doing her job. I’m just a customer, and she’s just a customer service representative. She’s simply presenting the curriculum, and it’s my role to decide whether I wish to purchase her product (ie believe her words) or to reject it. I’m free to do as I wish within the marketplace of ideas.” (more…)

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The Dizzying Sea of Parental Indulgence

 

JAMES P. writes:

You may recall the story of Abby Sunderland, who attempted to sail around the world solo at age 16 but who had to be rescued in rough seas.

Dutch girl Laura Dekker succeeded in sailing around the world solo. She is now 16 but was 14 when she began the journey. She may not return to the Netherlands because “Dutch authorities tried to block Ms Dekker’s trip, arguing she was too young to risk her life, while school officials complained she should be in a classroom.”  You will note that the “best rated” comments in the Daily Mail article cheer the “talented brave woman.” The worst rated ones say that her parents were irresponsible to permit her to do this and the Dutch government was right to discourage her.

(more…)

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Opportunities for Daughters

 

ON the 39th anniversary of Roe vs. Wade, Obama stated that abortion allows women to have the same “opportunities” as men. He vowed to “continue our efforts to ensure that our daughters have the same rights, freedoms, and opportunities as our sons to fulfill their dreams.”

This is a perfect and concise acknowledgement of the masculinizing intentions of feminism, which is woman-hating to the core, and of the denial of any rights to the unborn. Abortion is no more of an “opportunity” for a woman than a leg amputation.

Obama also said that abortion “affirms a broader principle: that government should not intrude on private family matters.” But if the legalization of abortion is not intruding on “private family matters” then what is?

(more…)

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The Evolution of a School in Multicultural Canada

  KIDIST PAULOS ASRAT, at Camera Lucida, has an interesting post about Jarvis Collegiate, formerly one of Canada's most elite high schools. Above is a photo of the class of 1907. Below is the class of 2008.

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Post-Conception Britain

 

BRITISH regulatory agencies announced yesterday that private hospitals and clinics may for the first time advertise abortion services on television. The two agencies, the Committee of Advertising Practice (CAP) and the Broadcast Committee of Advertising Practice (BCAP), said there were no grounds for denying commercial enterprises the right to advertise given that abortion is legal.

Under Britain’s chillingly Orwellian regulations, an abortion provider is a Post-Conception Advice Service (PCAS). (more…)

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A Possible Explanation for the Behavior on the Costa Concordia

 

AT VFR, Lawrence Auster offers a possible explanation for why men on the Costa Concordia rushed to save themselves without helping women and children:

While the loss of our culture’s ethos of chivalry is very regrettable, was it the reason the male crew members pushed past the female passengers to get in the life boats? Consider the fact that of the 1,000 crew members, at least 300 were Filipinos and the rest were largely Asian and Latin American. Mario Pellegrini, the deputy mayor of Giglio, who went out on a small boat to offer advice on the best way to get people on to the island, later told the National Post: (more…)

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Another Classic Aviation Movie

 

HOWARD SUTHERLAND writes:

Man in the Sky sounds like a movie I need to see. I’m a great Jack Hawkins fan, to begin with. Another movie that brings out that vanished man’s world of flying is 1957’s Zero Hour!, starring Sterling Hayden, Dana Andrews and others. Here is the New York Times’s favorable review of it; times have changed since 1957. (more…)

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