The late Joseph Sobran on how politicians talk about greed:
“Politicians never accuse you of ‘greed’ for wanting other people’s money—only for wanting to keep your own money.”
As if there’s something wrong with that.
The late Joseph Sobran on how politicians talk about greed:
“Politicians never accuse you of ‘greed’ for wanting other people’s money—only for wanting to keep your own money.”
As if there’s something wrong with that.
This writerly woman with no religion in her life but lots of stress went on retreat, explained herself to the good sister-director at the Jesuit Center, Wernersville PA:
Sister Barbara listened closely and then said, What I hear you saying, Susan, is that you feel forsaken.
Not dealing with abandonment issues: forsaken. Sister Barbara did not then press me to process my relationship with, say, my mother or to consider that I should own my feelings.
Bingo. Biblical language did it for her. She knew the difference. Words matter.
I am shocked that Hollywood moguls talk or even think this way:
Several moguls, in response, ”sent back word saying ‘Fuck You’ basically,” one insider tells me, expressing how they feel used and abused by the President despite their campaign contributions.
Moguls are “pissed” at his non-support of their anti-Internet-freedom legislation and are cutting off Obama’s water.
There was this to-do night before last, where Juan Williams pressed Newt on his “foodstamp president” remark etc. and Newt socked it to Juan. If you know about the exchange, you will consider this image right-on. If you don’t, you will look it up.
The image: http://www.americanthinker.com/cartoons/2012/01/image_by_richard_terrell_of_40.html
The background: http://hotair.com/archives/2012/01/16/video-gingrich-vs-juan-williams-on-the-food-stamp-president/
Is politics fun, or ain’t it?
The parish book discussion group met last night regarding Richard Rohr OFM’s “revised and updated” Everything Belongs: The Gift of Contemplative Prayer (Crossroad), a “spiritual classic,” with “over 100,000 copies in print.” My apologies to Fr. Rohr and Crossroad, but the blurb writer must be kidding.
One of us last night noted the “rant” quality that turns up in the book. I’d call it good blog copy. What the heck? Here today, gone later today, from readers’ minds, if not the blog page. Go for it, put your ideas out there for commenters and enemy bloggers to thrash and trash if they wish.
“Shoot, if you must, this old gray head,” cried Barbara Frietchie at the English troops in Whittier’s poem, “But spare your country’s flag (she said).” Spare what in this case? Contemplative prayer? Franciscan fathers everywhere?
Pre-discussion, I had gone into Rohr shock when I tried to read the book — inkblot, you know, tell the good doctor what it means to you, don’t feel shy.
Last night I said this book has been dictated, not written: Fr. Rohr in his New Mexico hermitage and a recorder. He’s a speaker not a writer, so he talked the book out. If you’re good enough at this, some light editing will do. The publisher can handle that, this fellow sells after all. Send it to the designer, and there we are.
Then one of us found Fr. Rohr’s candid admission opposite the publisher’s boilerplate page: “I want . . . to thank . . . [so&so, whose] years of friendship . . . have sent my taped words all over the world [the years did it, don’t blame the friend]. . . [and] put it [sic] down in writing . . . ”
Notice that “years . . . sent.” Have you ever seen a year sending? Fr. Rohr has. Notice also the “put it” intended to agree with “words.” Fr. Rohr is something of an antinomian in matters of syntax, is he not? In any case, tapes are book.
I say now, post-discussion, that Fr. R’s writing is chock-full of OK words (those inkblots: fill in the blanks) and assumptions — largely psycho-therapeutic, with a heavy dose of psycho-babble, as in “If your prayer is not enticing you outside your comfort zones, if your Christ is not an occasional ‘threat,’ [why the quotes?] you probably need to do some growing up and learning to love.” Probably.
We have here some sloppy work, like that submitted many years ago by the maybe apocryphal Jesuit high school graduate to a state university professor. The kid had put AMDG over the top of his page, as he was used to doing in high school for the holy Jesuits. The professor, not at all happy with what was submitted, asked him what that meant. “For the greater glory of God,” the kid said. To which the professor: “Is THAT your contribution to the greater glory of God?”
Is this book Fr. Rohr’s contribution?
White guys and one black beat on Asian kid, calling him nigger.
Later: The perps were racially identified as Chinese (five of them), white (the 17–year-old), and (apparently) black, as seen in the video:
Raymond Palomino [white] was charged as an adult. Hearings for the other six — including the 15-year-old girl [who reportedly lured the victim into the alley], two 16-year-old boys and three 15-year-old boys — were postponed in Juvenile Court as officials sought a Cantonese translator. Five of the six are Chinese, officials said. Their names were not released.
The b-ball star called up image of body bags for opponents. Gentlemen, start your engines of aggressivity for next time around.
Were you wondering how Detroit is doing? Very badly, as it happens.
Something political this way comes, from the pulpit.
Is she another Joshua facing her own Jericho wall? Well, she’s sure a clever one.