Links With Your Coffee - Monday
- Debunking the Reagan Myth - New York Times
Historical narratives matter. That’s why conservatives are still writing books denouncing F.D.R. and the New Deal; they understand that the way Americans perceive bygone eras, even eras from the seemingly distant past, affects politics today.
And it’s also why the furor over Barack Obama’s praise for Ronald Reagan is not, as some think, overblown. The fact is that how we talk about the Reagan era still matters immensely for American politics. - Q&A: Feingold charts course
Sen. Russ Feingold has a plan. Getting ready to head back to Washington as Congress is about to resume, the Democratic senator from Wisconsin has compiled a list of his top five domestic agenda items for 2008: a health care proposal, changes to the No Child Left Behind Act, improving public financing of presidential campaigns, strengthening the Clean Water Act and giving the president line-item veto powers.
He acknowledges none of the proposals are actually going to get passed this year, but he wants to at least move the needle on them. Build some critical mass to present to the new president. - Dinesh D'Souza Spreads Dishonest Propaganda…Again | Rational Responders
- The TNR Q&AIan McEwan
I think it is ineradicable, and I think it is a terrible idea to suppress it, too. We have tried that and it joins the list of political oppression. It seems to be fairly deeply stitched into human nature. It seems to be part of all cultures, so I don't expect it to vanish. And yet at the same time, if it is built into human nature, why are there so many people who don't believe in it? I think it is important that people with no religious beliefs speak up and speak for what they value. It is a bit of a problem, the title "Atheist"--no one really wants to be defined by what they do not believe in. We haven't yet settled on a name, but you wouldn't expect a Baptist minister to go around calling himself a Darwinist. But it is crucial that people who do not have a sky god and don't have a set of supernatural beliefs assert their belief in moral values and in love and in the transcendence that they might experience in landscape or art or music or sculpture or whatever. Since they do not believe in an afterlife, it makes them give more valence to life itself. The little spark that we do have becomes all the more valuable when you can't be trading off any moments for eternity.
- 'Don't allow religious hooligans to dictate terms'-India-The Times of India Salman Rushdie
- Chelsea Clinton, girl detective | Democracy in America | Economist.com
- MyFox Austin | Religious Leaders Undergo Crisis TrainingUnintentionally funny
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Comments
Re: Krugman's op-ed
Besides pandering to independents and disgusted Republicans, there's a pretty obvious reason that Barack Obama spoke of Reagan in a somewhat positive light. A straight-up comparison of the Clinton years with the preceding 12 years or following 7 years blows Reagan-Bush-Bush out of the water. Against any Democratic opponent other than Hillary Clinton, Obama would be crowing about the superior performance of Bill Clinton in both the primaries and general election.
Posted by: Tim
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January 21, 2008 4:03 PM
"Distinguishing a show of faith from a mental health crisis is the key." My only correction to that statement is that they are the same thing, just with different names. Is a clinic bombing a show of faith, or a mental health crisis? Hmmm...
Posted by: Stupid Git
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January 21, 2008 11:03 PM
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