Count me among supporters of prayer and fasting, but I would like to hear more preaching on the religious liberty issue, aka HHS mandate and its penal-law implications.
Tag: Blithe Spirit
Fat lady’s song not the final answer
Quip of the week, no question:
A pro-abortion zealot once castigated his pro-life opponents, saying, “Don’t you people get it? You’ve lost. It’s over. The fat lady has sung.” To which one of them replied, “It is not over when the fat lady sings. It is over when the angel blows his trumpet.” – Christopher Beiting
This fellow can talk to me any time.
A site for the writerly
Such a good site here, from Francella Belton. Full of writer’s stuff and beautifully laid out.
What algorhythm in your PC?
Google developers warns me against a site, a well-regarded Catholic conservative page dealing with religious and societal values.
The supposed problems are phishing and malware. Interesting, not a revolting development.
G. asks to be informed if their algorhythms are mistaken. I’d say they are in this case. Honestly mistaken, I trust.
Can’t always trust an algorhythm?
How big government led to the Great Hunger
A free-market man responds to the New Yorker writer who said laissez-faire starved the Irish:
After defeating James II in 1690, victorious protestants subjected Catholics – Ireland’s majority population – to cruel restrictions on land ownership and leasing. These policies led most of Ireland’s people to farm plots that were inefficiently small and on which the Irish had no incentives to make long-term improvements.
As a result, agricultural productivity in Ireland stagnated, and the high-yield, highly nutritious, labor-intensive potato became the dominant crop.
In combination with other discriminatory measures that obstructed Catholics from participating in modern commerce – measures that kept far too large a portion of Ireland’s population practicing subsistence agriculture well into the 19th century – this over-dependence on the potato spelled doom when in 1845 that crop became infected with the fungus Phytophthora infestans.
There’s more more more here from the excellent Donald J. Boudreaux at George Mason U.
To be tagged at birth, with witnesses
If she bears twins, you know it’s important who’s born first, of course. I mean Kate Middleton, of course. But you knew this, of course.
Creative Minority Report: Jesuit Celebrates Mass with Womyn Priest, Suspended
Learning to teach, the hard way, at St. Ignatius
Excerpt from Company Man: My Jesuit Life, 1950-1968, available at Lulu.com.
Taking a bead on Catholic sermons
Bishops to the rescue with letter on preaching:
The document is an admonishment of poor preaching, saying the bishops are “aware that in survey after survey over the past years, the People of God have called for more powerful and inspiring preaching. A steady diet of tepid or poorly prepared homilies is often cited as a cause for discouragement on the part of laity and even leading some to turn away from the Church.”
Well, they themselves should stop using “people of God” every time they turn around. It’s like “American people” on the lips of a U.S. politician. Loses its lustre after a time, does it not?
And while we’re at it, “admonishment”? Really? From WashPost at that? Clumsy, clumsy.
Oh those folks again
What’s with this “folks” business, as in this by press vet Jules Witcover:
Reporters, doing what they do, either knew of the call and tapped into it or learned of Romney’s remarks from folks who conveyed them to newspapers like the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times that quickly printed them. [italics added]
Once it was close to “folksy.” Obama did it. One more thing to hold against him. He’s NOT articulate, keeps falling back, between “uh”s, on tired phrases, not always, as in this case, used to agreen with accepted usage.