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Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Delany calls larger tournament 'probable'

The Big Ten commissioner indicates the NCAA cannot leave well enough alone. Doug Gottlieb (former 'Poke) gets it right on not expanding the basketball tournament, with a point that is not limited to a great tournament:
The thing that is kind of going under the radar is how we don't understand the law of unintended consequences.

Tuesday, March 30, 2010

'RapeLay' video game goes viral amid outrage

Whether the result of moral confusion, or a necessary evil of the freedoms of the internet, or both, dehumanizing women still plays.

Friday, March 26, 2010

How the Left fakes the hate

Did happiness on the left die with Paul Wellstone? What was once worth a chuckle when it lived as Bush Derangement Syndrome, has now become tiresome with its manufactured state of projection.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

More Greenland ice melts faster

If the president is as successful with delivering his health care promises as he was to have been with the recovery from glacial melting the instant he was elected, presumably because Nature (capital "N") would sense that he had been elected, then we may be doomed.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

The future of politics lies with women

It is hard to refute the increasing influence of women on politics given the demographic trends in the West alone. However, to assume there is a monolithic leftist bloc waiting to tapped as described here would be to commit the same error that people make about Catholics.

The health bill's collateral damage

The first of many such stories as to how Obamacare falls short of the hype, now that we get to find what was in the bill because it was passed.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Twins agree to terms with Joe Mauer

Making good on their implicit promise to build a winner now that they have their new stadium,  the Twins quelled a slowly building anxiety and got a little bit of a hometown discount to boot. Now if we can find a closer...

Acorn on brink of bankruptcy, officials say

We can only hope this is the end for Acorn. Professional activists have a way of surviving, so some form of reincarnation is likely.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Is food the new sex?

That there is a relationship between the human experiences of food and sex is a common sense statement. What is curious, as both have come into abundance in the West and the progressive view on both subjects has come to dominate, is how little recognition is being given in the culture to the transfer of restrictive mores from sex to food (and smoking for that matter). What is not curious is the failure of imagination to recognize that lust is every bit as deadly a sin as gluttony. Rest assured that what goes around will come around.

Tuesday, March 16, 2010

US credit rating at risk, Moody's warns

Here is a way Obamacare could get aborted: All that pre-collection goes to cover escalating debt payments, if the rosy recovery scenarios don't play out. How long then until the executive branch takes over the ratings agencies to "correct" the risk valuation? And that might be a best case solution.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Solar sector's long-term outlook is far from sunny

With solar being a low-density energy source, the need for innovation in not in the novelty of the technology, but in the reduction in cost and increase in scalability. This means that the industry will struggle for the foreseeable future unless government subsidizes the installation of solar on a massive scale, bringing the financial and cultural dislocations that would go with it.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Hunter talks about race and Guillen defends Latin players

After Torii Hunter expressed concern about Latino major leaguers being mistaken for African-Americans in the baseball diversity wars, ever-outspoken White Sox manager Ozzie Guillen counters by saying it is ultimately about talent. While Jackie Robinson did break the color barrier, it seems somebody may have installed an electronic surveillance system in its place.

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Waterboarding for dummies

Free tip: If a technique can cause "physical fatigue or psychological resignation" to the point that a detainee will try to let himself die during the next time it is applied, then that is a good indication the technique in question is torture.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Abortion and race: a complicated problem

It does not take a freakish economist to recognize that ignoring the obvious leads to disproportionate negative consequences

Friday, March 5, 2010

The Culture Project unveiled

Several years in the making, arguably before Phil Lawler's current effort began, CatholicCulture.org announces it is ready for prime time.

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

What have the Olympics revealed about God and country!

It took me until about the third time hearing a full-throated version of the host nation's national anthem to recognize this.