Politics as a family business

Steve Sailer’s review of a couple of books on nepotism touches on a point that has struck me, that failed totalitarian states become nepotistic because social trust has vanished and other possible principles of cohesion have been destroyed. Since failed totalitarianism seems to be what we’re headed toward (totalitarianism doesn’t work, and advanced liberalism is … More ...

The Times and the times

It’s remarkable that the New York Times should publish this: Eurabia?, by historian Niall Ferguson. Low birthrates, abandonment of Christianity, and Muslim immigration—symbolized by an Islamic center at Oxford—look like they mean the end of Europe. Not even a silly dig at the “Neanderthal right” does much to change the analysis.

Meanwhile, on other … More ...

Glorious past, glorious future!

Mrs. Anthony Lewis, Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, has given us “gay marriage” on the 50th anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education. She’s evidently timing her benefaction to stick a moral point to us and wrap herself and her deed in glory even beyond their merits. Not to fall … More ...

Reason and consequences

My last entry, on Melanie Phillips and her comments on the compulsory radical egalitarianism that has become so firmly established in the UK (and the West generally), brought to mind the general question of how to explain major social trends, especially major social trends like PC that seem sort of weird.

It seems to me … More ...

Liberalism, Tradition and the Church IV

Historical and Practical Considerations

I have argued that rationalism does not work, that life in accordance with reason must rely on particular tradition and revelation, and that Catholicism has a good claim to be the most reasonable of revelations. Many people, of course, deny all those things.

The most forceful objection to my claims is … More ...