A Red Dixiecrat Dawn?

Is America turning into Dixie?  And, if it is, is that a bad thing? The controversy over the blue social model keeps heating up.  With the controversy over Wisconsin’s restrictions on public employee unions metastasizing from the Madison protests to what increasingly looks like a national political battle, the blue state and red state models […]

May One Pray for Miracles?

On February 18, 2011, The Christian Century carried a short piece (Century Marks section, no permanent link available), possibly for the purpose of light entertainment.  During the apartheid period in South Africa an Anglican convent was visited by a prominent theologian. One of the resident nuns informed him: “You church leaders have a big job […]

Paul Krugman Gets It Half Right

Even a stopped clock is right twice a day; Paul Krugman was almost this lucky in his recent New York Times column: Degrees and Dollars.  It’s an important column and should be required reading even for people who stopped reading him a long time ago.  Krugman’s take on what’s wrong with the American economy and […]

Stratblog: The Grand Strategy of Rome

The last two weeks in our grand strategy seminar have dealt with the war between Hannibal and Rome. The Second Punic War was one of history’s great confrontations, and the struggle has echoed and re-echoed down the millennia. Hannibal’s audacity, his tactical brilliance and his sheer military genius have challenged and inspired generations of strategists. […]

Lincoln, Davis in Inaugural Shuffle

[As part of The American Interest’s commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, I will be playing Civil War pundit from time to time: that is, I will post pieces about Civil War events as if they were happening now.  The goal of these posts is to illuminate the issues and problems of […]

The Mead List: World’s Top Ten Gaddafi Toads

When Muammar Gaddafi, the ‘Commander of Islam’, Africa’s King of Kings and the Great Loon of Libya addressed the United Nations General Assembly at unusual length in 2009, he asked about the hanging of Saddam Hussein.  “How is the member of a government and president of a country sentenced to hang? Who were these people […]

Our Lady of Kazan and American Pluralism

The icon of Our Lady of Kazan (also known as the Black Virgin of Kazan) is one of the most famous in Russian Orthodoxy.  One of the Virgin’s two feast days coincides with the Day of National Unity. This is appropriate. Kazan occupies an important place in Russian history. Its conquest and destruction in 1552 […]

The Apron Chronicles

An apron can tell a great story, if you know how to tie one on.

We Like to Watch

Jerzy Kosinski’s Being There is too biting to be funny anymore.

King Solomon’s Vanishing Temple

The Palestinian denial of Jewish historical roots in Jerusalem is a denial of their own history, as well.

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