What About Confession? What Do You Think Confession's For?
When Catholics receive Communion, they must strive to do so “worthily,” meaning they have repented of their sins and desire to live in keeping with the teachings of the Catholic Church. In the Bible, the apostle Paul warns of grave consequences for those who take Communion unworthily. But Naumann is also worried about the message Biden communicates to other Catholics when he takes Communion while continuing to support abortion rights: “Whether he intends it or not, he’s basically saying to people, ‘You can be a good Catholic and do similar things,’” [Archbishop] Naumann told me.
Boo
It’s been a minute since a singer could get away with calling himself “Stonewall Jackson,” but I remember hearing this on the radio.
Ancient Greek Computation
The Present Regime, circa 2016
Worth reconsidering in light of the present moment, and the last several years -- or even the last six months. I am posting it here because I haven't time to read it this morning, and want to get back to it when I do have time.
UPDATE: Also interesting is the Codevilla essay it begins with -- again, this is 2016 -- that declares that Trump will be the end of America as a republic.
Mind-Blindness
A Curfew on Men
The Dead South
That's no reason why they cain't be friends
Plato's Parmenides III: Greater Difficulties
Then if the most perfect mastership and most perfect knowledge are in the god's world, the gods' mastership can never be exercised over us, nor their knowledge know us or anything in our world. Just as we do not rule over them by virtue of rule as it exists in our world, and we know nothing that is divine by our knowledge, so they, on the same principle, being gods, are not our masters nor do they know anything of human concerns.
The Ballad of Pancho and Lefty
A sad song, all around; perhaps especially in its embrace of betrayal of friendship to power and wealth.
They're right: Lefty needs your prayers, far more than Pancho Villa, who was not merely a bandit as according to the American understanding. He was a constitutionalist, even; for a while.
Federalism?
Oh, Really?
In the days before the election, Wisconsin gave a Democratic activist the keys to the room where absentee ballots were stored.
Plato's Parmenides II: The First Difficulties
Parmenides takes over the questioning of Socrates, to explore the difficulties of the theory of Forms -- but along the way, he illuminates what the Forms must be like if they do in fact exist.
Soc: I am afraid that there would be an absurdityin assuming any idea of them, although I sometimes get disturbed,and begin to think that there is nothing without an idea; but thenagain, when I have taken up this position, I run away, because I amafraid that I may fall into a bottomless pit of nonsense, and perish;and so I return to the ideas of which I was just now speaking, andoccupy myself with them.Par: Yes, Socrates, said Parmenides; that is because you are still young;the time will come, if I am not mistaken, when philosophy will havea firmer grasp of you, and then you will not despise even the meanestthings; at your age, you are too much disposed to regard opinionsof men.
Well, said Parmenides, and what do you say of another question?What question?I imagine that the way in which you are led to assume one idea ofeach kind is as follows: -You see a number of great objects, and whenyou look at them there seems to you to be one and the same idea (ornature) in them all; hence you conceive of greatness as one.Very true, said Socrates.And if you go on and allow your mind in like manner to embrace inone view the idea of greatness and of great things which are not theidea, and -to compare them, will not another greatness arise, whichwill appear to be the source of all these?
Medical censorship
Striking Back Against Big Tech
Karen Hao in the MIT Technology Review has an interesting article titled "How to poison the data that Big Tech uses to surveil you."
Data strikes, data poisoning, and intentional data contribution to competitors, explained and discussed.
A Permanent Praetorian Guard
The task force established to review how to protect Congress from the American people calls for a permanent military presence.