CS Lewis Rejected Royal Honor

CS Lewis, who with his Oxford colleague JRR Tolkien, ranks with Ian Fleming, Agatha Christie and Arthur Conan Doyle as among the best known 20th century British authors among Americans, turned both Winston Churchill and the Queen down flat, newly released British documents show.The Order of the British Empire was established by George V originally […]

Indiana, Meet Wisconsin

Earlier this month, reports that Indiana was gearing up for a fight between conservative politicians and organized labors brought echoes of Scott Walker’s Wisconsin to mind. The comparison has just become even more apt—the New York Times reports that Democrats opposing the right-to-work bill have decided to defeat it the only way they can—by refusing […]

Nigeria: Between a Rock and a Hard Place

Nigeria’s national borders were drawn by British colonial officials after WWII. Since then, nothing but tension and violence, interspersed with periods of relative calm, have characterized the relationship between Nigeria’s religious and tribal groups. Several times since independence, conflicts have escalated into civil war or efforts by one group or another to form their own […]

Larry Summers on the Future of Education

The former president of Harvard put forward some important thoughts on higher education in a speech to the New York Times Schools for Tomorrow conference. He proposes six “guesses and hopes.” Here’s a quick excerpt: Suppose the educational system is drastically altered to reflect the structure of society and what we now understand about how […]

Poll: Global Investors Favor the US

For years the punditocracy has been analyzing American decline. Dynamic Asia, united Europe, exciting BRICs: they’ve all been hailed as the new leaders in the world economy. America, wounded in the Middle East, victimized by its outmoded “Anglo-Saxon” capitalist model, deindustrialized beyond hope or repair, was toast.But a funny thing happened on the way to […]

Stubborn Amish and Stubborn Atheists

One of my earliest memories is of an incident in the kindergarten of my childhood in Vienna. I must have been at most five years old. I was supposed to speak a line in a play about which I have no memory. All I remember is that I was wearing a top hat and was […]

The Once and Future Liberalism

The cover story for the next issue of The American Interest has just been released on the homepage: Walter Mead on “The Once and Future Liberalism.”Check it out here.

Ambiguous Embargo, Ambivalent Response

The EU’s pledge to ban Iranian oil imports in six months is confusing everyone.  Iran for one can’t decide whether to worry or gloat.  Reuters has Iran’s response: Emad Hosseini, spokesman for parliament’s energy committee, said that if Iran encountered any problem selling its oil, it would store it. “If we don’t export our oil […]

Screen Sharing Brings Tutors to the Inner City

Via Meadia has looked at how teleconference technology may save the planet. Can it also provide education to poor children in the inner city? According to a recent New York Times piece, it can. The Times reports that JPMorgan Chase has launched a new remote tutoring program in which volunteers tutor children in dangerous or […]

Trend #8: Uneven Development and the “African Time Bomb”

The Olympics, like the world, is a complicated field of winners and losers. Some countries win often: the U.S. mens’ 400-meter swimming relay team has won thirteen straight times, a streak going back to 1960. Other countries are accustomed to losing: the Central African Republic has never won any medal. Still other countries win some […]

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