The rules of capitalism are being re-written. Banks are being nationalized. Governments are pouring money and incentives into the economic system. Interest rates are being lowered towards zero. Consumers are being asked to buy more in order to re-start the cycle of consumption-driven production, while Barak Obama gets on with saving the planet. Writing in the Guardian in August, Tory adviser Philip Blond explained succinctly that “the crisis of contemporary capitalism results... READ MORE >
To understand why Proposition 8, the ballot initiative that banned gay marriage, won in California, watch the campaign’s TV commercials at the What Is Prop 8? website. Not only were they well-made, featuring a multi-ethnic cross-section of very normal, quasi-hip, young to middle-age Californians, the commercials were models of serious, rational political argument. While anti-Prop 8 commercials resorted to showing Mormon missionaries conducting Gestapo-like home invasions of... READ MORE >
I have a commentary in this week’s National Catholic Register entitled “What Now? Will New Voters Refashion the Democratic Party?” I argue that the election had a silver lining for Catholics: the same voters who turned out in large numbers for Obama--blacks and other minorities--voted strongly for California’s Proposition 8, the ballot initiative which amended the state constitution to ban gay marriage. (Gay marriage bans also passed in Arizona and Florida). I cite that... READ MORE >
If you’re feeling down about the ever-widening gap between blue-state and red-state America (and the even wider gap between blue and red Catholics), you can find hope in Sarah Palin. Ironically, the woman who’s been blamed for single-handedly re-igniting the culture wars is showing signs that she can appeal across the cultural divide. This past weekend she pulled off a smooth performance on Saturday Night Live, and now she’s inspired Radar Magazine to put together a video mash-up... READ MORE >
If you want to extract information from suspected terrorists, force them to listen to an endless loop of Sarah Palin speeches. I guarantee it would work. (Fortunately, John McCain is against torture.) Yet despite her grating voice and her muddled syntax, Palin managed on Saturday to pull off an effective pro-life speech that artfully strung together every substantial talking point available against Obama’s “unconditional support for unlimited abortions.” If only it weren’t... READ MORE >
In today’s NY Times, Peter Goodman’s excellent profile of former Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan confirms what I’ve been writing, that it was a specific “structure of sin”—financial speculation—rather than mere human greed (or bad home loans) that created the credit crisis. I’d always wondered how a rigid anti-government libertarian ideologue like Greenspan—an Ayn Rand disciple, no less—managed to get appointed to the most powerful economic post in the... READ MORE >
Europe’s financiers were seduced by the lure of easy subprime mortgage profits, just like everyone else, and they’re suffering now, just like everyone else. But give Europe credit for one thing: Thanks to its Catholic roots, Europe’s leaders understand that the financial crisis wasn’t caused by some vague form of “greed”; it was caused by greed purposely channeled into useless financial speculation, rather than into productive investment.
Norman Mailer’s The Castle in the Forest was a novel about Hitler narrated by a demon, who writes: “Most well-educated people are ready to bridle at the notion of such an entity as the Devil...There need be no surprise, then, that the world has an impoverished understanding of Adolf Hitler’s personality.” I was reminded of that quote during Valkyrie, a true-story account of the most organized, wide-reaching... READ MORE >
When Caden Cotard wakes up, the first thing he does is look in a mirror. He sees a pudgy, middle-aged, balding, sad-sack of a human being. The rest of the movie will be like that: a merciless self-examination. Neil Gaiman, sci-fi and fantasy author, described most current literary fiction as “miserable people having small epiphanies of misery.” Charlie Kaufman, who wrote Being John Malkovich and... READ MORE >
A legendary manuscript co-written by Beat Masters, Jack Kerouac and William S. Burroughs, has finally come to light as And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks. Written when both were unknown and unpublished, leading hardscrabble lives in wartime New York, the real-life story centers on the doomed relationship between Lucien Carr and David Kammerer, mutual friends of the would-be Beats. Though the... READ MORE >
GOSPEL MEDITATION The Gospel for Sunday, October 19, 2008
Twenty-ninth Sunday in Ordinary Time
Matthew: 22:15-21
This is the heart of the mystery of Christ's birth: to save humanity from the selfishness of sin and its corollary of death, God himself lovingly enters, in Christ, into the fullness of life, into human history, thus raising humanity to the horizon of an even greater life.
RE: Mission Impossible Kathleen Lundquist writes "A good review - thanks, John. I saw the movie this weekend and agree with your assessment. Though it has the few flaws you noted, I recommend Valkyrie - it’s well-put-together, entertaining, …"
RE: Why Prop 8 Won: TV Commercials Based on Reason, not Fear CCV writes "How about this - all couples, regardless of gender, are granted the same civil union status from the State. If they want to get married, they go to their church. Separation of Church …"
RE: The Ugly Truth cartesian coordinates writes "“Kaufman’s (or at least Cotard’s) world is death, decay, illness, pessimism, disappointment, brutality.” Was this movie based on a Philip Roth novel?
"
RE: After the Disaster: Back to the Family and Localism justint writes "Thank you Caldecott for this timely article that tolls like a church bell just before Mass. The Catholic family or the domestic church will out live the polity of our times, while …"
RE: Struggling with the Rosary Jeff Johnson, Collegeville writes "Thanks for this. I am on year 14 I think; at 49 I wish I had started much earlier in my tiny life as a Catholic. One thing that helped me was attending to consecrating my soul to …"
RE: Why Prop 8 Won: TV Commercials Based on Reason, not Fear leftymn writes "“The issue is about preserving society’s right to say that there is a transcendent purpose to marriage, based on the objective reality that through the complementary sexual union …“the>"
RE: After the Disaster: Back to the Family and Localism lmlickona writes "It seems to me that the reason why it is “tremendously hard to implement practically” is that we are already living in a system that is radically weighted toward individualism. My …"
RE: Blood Lust John Murphy writes "Those are really good points, Anna, and well expressed. One of the things about the movie I liked (and I’m assuming this comes from the book), is how it pays homage to great literature …"
RE: Blood Lust Anna writes "Although I agree when you note that it seems Bella could more deeply appreciate Edward’s resolution to deny himself for her, I think it’s important to stress how much Twilight’s …"
RE: After the Disaster: Back to the Family and Localism JasonI writes "This article portrays a nice sentiment: basically warmed over Jeffersonian localism with a pro-family spin. The problem is this ideal is tremendously hard to implement practically, …"
It’s rare to see a positive story about the Catholic Church in the mainstream media, especially in newer online-only publications like Slate, but Harold Fickett, a Godspy contributing editor, managed to publish an essay there recently about the Clear Creek Monastery, a new and growing contemplative Benedictine monastery in Kansas, and the wider story of how Catholic religious communities are attracting young people. It could be that the critical... READ MORE >
A trillion for the Iraq War, almost as much to rescue Wall Street, but basic health care for all is too expensive? Why aren't Christian leaders in the U.S. saying as much? In England it's a different story: "[T]he Archbishop of Canterbury, Dr Rowan Williams, warned in a magazine article that modern devotion to the free market is a form of idolatry and that Karl Marx was morally right in his analysis of the power of 'unbridled capitalism.' He believes... READ MORE >
The Vatican continues to take every opportunity to discourage preemptive war: "The use of violence to resolve disagreements is always a failure of vision and a failure of humanity. The responsibility to protect should not be viewed merely in terms of military intervention but primarily as the need for the international community to come together in the face of crises to find means for fair and open negotiations, support the moral force of law and... READ MORE >
A fascinating peek at how a small unit that "flourished in a climate of opulent pay, lax oversight and blind faith in financial risk models" brought down AIG, the world's largest insurance company. "Although America’s housing collapse is often cited as having caused the crisis, the system was vulnerable because of intricate financial contracts known as credit derivatives, which insure debt holders against default. They are fashioned privately and... READ MORE >
Latest Comments
Kathleen Lundquist writes "A good review - thanks, John. I saw the movie this weekend and agree with your assessment. Though it has the few flaws you noted, I recommend Valkyrie - it’s well-put-together, entertaining, …"
CCV writes "How about this - all couples, regardless of gender, are granted the same civil union status from the State. If they want to get married, they go to their church. Separation of Church …"
cartesian coordinates writes "“Kaufman’s (or at least Cotard’s) world is death, decay, illness, pessimism, disappointment, brutality.” Was this movie based on a Philip Roth novel? "
justint writes "Thank you Caldecott for this timely article that tolls like a church bell just before Mass. The Catholic family or the domestic church will out live the polity of our times, while …"
Jeff Johnson, Collegeville writes "Thanks for this. I am on year 14 I think; at 49 I wish I had started much earlier in my tiny life as a Catholic. One thing that helped me was attending to consecrating my soul to …"
leftymn writes "“The issue is about preserving society’s right to say that there is a transcendent purpose to marriage, based on the objective reality that through the complementary sexual union …“the>"
lmlickona writes "It seems to me that the reason why it is “tremendously hard to implement practically” is that we are already living in a system that is radically weighted toward individualism. My …"
John Murphy writes "Those are really good points, Anna, and well expressed. One of the things about the movie I liked (and I’m assuming this comes from the book), is how it pays homage to great literature …"
Anna writes "Although I agree when you note that it seems Bella could more deeply appreciate Edward’s resolution to deny himself for her, I think it’s important to stress how much Twilight’s …"
JasonI writes "This article portrays a nice sentiment: basically warmed over Jeffersonian localism with a pro-family spin. The problem is this ideal is tremendously hard to implement practically, …"
Dave writes "The 100th post! You are closed. "
chassup writes "JMEDAILLE, you are factually wrong, and I think you made a gross error voting for Obama who plans to remove all the restrictions to abortions that HAVE saved lives. It is detestable …"