Streetwalkers Everywhere

 

J.N., who is a man, writes in response to this entry:

I’d really appreciate it if women would start raising fashion standards among other women, especially in church. Many women dress modestly, but there are some who come to worship God in very short skirts and tight, thin, low-cut blouses. And it’s not just the young ladies doing it — I’ve seen middle-aged mothers dress this way, too. (more…)

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More on Women Priests

 

THE reasons why women cannot be – and should not be – priests are rooted in biology, psychology, ethics and metaphysical reality. In this entry, Kristor expands on the subject. The position of priest is not simply one of privilege, it is a form of sacrifice. He writes: (more…)

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A Snapshot of Priestesses

 

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FROM SHEWIRED.COM’S most recent list of the 100 most “courageous” homosexuals:

An Episcopalian priest, Rev. Dr. Katherine Ragsdale (right) served for 17 years on the national board for the Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice. She drew fire in 2009 from religious conservatives when she called abortion a “blessing” and the doctors who perform them “heroes.” This year, she and fellow Episcopalian priest Rev. Mally Lloyd were married at the Cathedral Church of St. Paul in Boston by Bishop M. Thomas Shaw on New Year’s Day.

This is modern-day spinsterhood at its finest. It’s what every little girl dreams of, isn’t it? To be photographed dressed up in old furs kissing another spinster. As for the church that accepts these lesbians as priestesses, well, let’s just say it’s finished, a force for evil instead of good. It’s what my grandmother would have called “a school for spinsters.”

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Good-Hearted Evil

 

IN OUR perverse world, evil often wears the face of a good-hearted man. At VFR, Lawrence Auster writes about the French official who defended the decision to allow a 17-year-old boy who had raped a girl free without warning others of his record. The rapist was accepted to a private school, where he raped and murdered a 13-year-old girl:

Remember the name Matthieu Bonduelle, because what he said is the essence of liberal evil. In the mind of this monster, to separate from society a person who is a manifest threat to society, poses an even greater risk of a repeat offense than letting him back into society. Why? Because, as liberals see it, people are naturally good and society’s institutions–in this case prisons–make people bad. (more…)

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The Futile Search for Lovely Women

 

RANDY BROWNING writes:

This weekend slapped me into a reality for which I was not fully prepared. I was going through a couple sales magazines for two major department chains in the area, and was shocked at the subtlety of the change in poses. The women had achieved what looked to be masculine stature, while the men were deliberately posed in the effeminate. One of these retailers had obviously resisted the PC movement, but has recently taken to a 50/50 display of people of color (not reflected by the same percentages of residents in this state). (more…)

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The Effeminization of the Priesthood

 

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THE CATHOLIC PRIEST today, in violation of many centuries of tradition, often finds himself surrounded on the altar by women and girls. This relatively recent innovation has changed the entire tone and symbolism of the liturgy. Women naturally, through their faces, their voices, their gestures and clothes, draw attention to themselves. Many women who serve as lectors, cantors or Eucharistic ministers are highly respectful in their demeanour and attire, but even so their presence is distracting. And some are not highly respectful. Female cantors are prone to project themselves excessively, making performance out of their role, their audience (and that is what a congregation is reduced to – an audience) captive to amateurish theatricals.

As I explain in the previous entry, there were many reasons why women were excluded altogether from the altar in the past. Only a philistine would view these traditions as scorn for women.

Some people say that declining vocations justify the presence of women on the altar. In fact, it is much more likely, if not certain, that the predominance of women leads to declining vocations. Men will never be drawn to the priesthood in large numbers if they must be adjuncts to women in their most visible role. To the modern man, holiness and manliness seem at odds – he may be hellishly torn between these contradictory drives – because of the loss of male authority and hierarchy. The effusive, emotion-drenched atmosphere of contemporary Christianity is like a gauntlet thrown down before him, a challenge to his elemental, irrefutable identity as a man.

The masculinity of the priesthood has been severely undermined, so much so that the issue of whether women should be priests seems all but settled, and this represents a crisis of monumental proportions.

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One Small, Promising Step Away from the Feminized Church

 

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JENNIFER ZICKEL is outraged because her daughters will not be able to serve as altar girls at the Corpus Christi Catholic church in the Arlington, Virginia area. The pastor has ended the practice, returning to the traditional custom of altar boys, and there is very little protest. Nevertheless, The Washington Post writesof the dissatisfaction of Zickel and a few others. Even though women typically outnumber men on altars in Catholic churches, and the Novus Ordo liturgy is often infused with a feminine, heart-throbbing sensibility, Zickel ran out of church in tears when she learned her little girls will not be altar servers someday, as if she had been told they would be forcibly confined to convents for the rest of their lives.

(more…)

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When Men Were Free to Be Dour

 

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IT WOULD be difficult to find a public figure today wearing an expression of convincing severity and authority such as Winston Churchill wore in this 1941 photo. It’s true, those were serious times. But these are serious times too and he wore a similar expression long before the war.

We are surrounded by vapid smiles (see this official photo of Obama) – smiles on newscasters, politicians, journalists, priests, intellectuals. An age of radical democracy is one in which power is diffused and virility demonized. Noxious sentimentality masks the emptiness once occupied by men. (more…)

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The Smiley Society

 

First Mate Piggy of the USS Swinetrek.
First Mate Piggy of the USS Swinetrek.

ALAN writes:

You asked in a recent post: When did it become unacceptable to have one’s picture taken without an enormous grin?”

Excellent question.  

Tentative answer: About the time when TV stations began to feature “happy talk” in their news reports. I distinctly remember my reaction to that at the time (more than 35 years ago). It was, I thought, the most ridiculous thing I had ever seen: Grown men and women whose job was to report the news were now making cutesy-poo “happy talk.” It was, I said to myself, a sure sign that American culture was descending into infantilism.   (more…)

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The End of Cursive

 

THE latest fad in public education is eliminating cursive penmanship, a move that Linda Schrock Taylor at LewRockwell.com says represents “literacy’s last hurrah.” Cursive helps children learn to read. She writes:

As a child does cursive writing, the rhythmic and purposeful movements of the hand and pencil echo and reinforce the child’s thoughts and speech, matching and practicing those two basic and automatically acquired skills. (more…)

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Another Important Pizza Bulletin

 

A Congressional spending bill released on Monday would allow schools to define pizza as a vegetable under Department of Agriculture regulations. This is long overdue recognition that in the Age of Pizza, pizza is a vegetable.

Pizza is a vegetable in the same way pea pods and squash are vegetables. Pizza grows on thick green stalks that come from tiny pizza seeds (under a magnifying glass they look like tiny pies). (more…)

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A Failed Experiment in Democracy

 

THE MOST compelling argument monarchists have against democracy as a political system is right before our eyes: modern-day America. Is there any doubt that if Tocqueville were reborn and journeyed through America today he would conclude that democracy is man’s worst political innovation, that it produces stupidity, moral cowardice, soft slavery, and a ruling elite that diffuses and cloaks its rule with meritocracy? All of Tocqueville’s worst prophecies have come true. Our democracy is tyrannical.

At VFR, readers give bleak assessments of this great experiment in equality and representative government. Matthew H. writes: 

More and more the State and the majority of the centers of power and influence seem to be controlled by people who somehow combine the topsy-turvy nuttiness of an old Batman TV show villain with the clinical efficiency of the SS. We are beset by hosts of smutty, totalitarian buffoons. (more…)

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A Few Words on the Battlefield of Domesticity

 

 

TERESA OF ÁVILA, the saint and contemplative, wrote the following words to her Carmelite sisters. They apply well to the woman at home today even though she obviously does not live in seclusion or detach herself from “kinsfolk.” Because domesticity is so trivialized, presented as something easy and minor, the great spiritual challenges are rarely addressed. St. Teresa wrote:

Once we have detached ourselves from the world, and from our kinsfolk, and are cloistered here, in the conditions already described, it must look as if we have done everything and there is nothing with which we have to contend. But, oh, my sisters, do not feel secure and fall asleep, or you will be like a man who goes to bed quite peacefully, after bolting all his doors for fear of thieves, when the thieves are already in the house. (more…)

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More on Domestic Terminology

 

I failed to post this comment from an anonymous reader regarding the recent discussion about housewives, stay-at-home moms and domestic engineers. The reader wrote:

Perhaps a married woman who works outside the home for wages could be called a jobwife.   (more…)

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A Robbery Gone Bad

  KEVIN NEARY, a 29-year-old graduate of the University of Pennsylvania, was walking home in his Philadelphia Northern Liberties neighborhood early Tuesday morning when he was stopped, asked for money by a gunman, and then immediately shot in the neck. It was just another day on the streets of America, where gun violence by blacks against whites is routine, leaving tears of agony but no collective outrage. The gunman was black. Neary is expected to be paralysed from the neck down for life. It was, in the words of a TV news reporter, "a robbery gone bad."

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Could America Someday Have a King?

 

THE discussion about monarchy vs. democracy, a topic considered obsolete by much of the world, continues in this thread.

In response to the point that monarchy violates American tradition and represents too radical of a change, James P. writes:

We could not get from democracy to monarchy without profound change, and many people would find the new regime unpalatable. (more…)

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