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Catholic law professor Stephen Bainbridge has more on just war and proportionality. Prof. Bainbridge is making a slightly different point than the one I was trying to get at. He’s more concerned about how the targeting of civilian infrastructure violates the criterion of proportionality. I was assuming, for the sake of argument, a case where Read more
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Matthew Yglesias has a really good article at the American Prospect on what he calls the “Green Lantern” theory of politics. This is the idea that the only thing standing between us and achieving our objectives is a lack of will power. Just like Green Lantern’s power ring can do pretty much anything if the Read more
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Tim Cavanaugh tries to puzzle it out. I’m as clueless about this situation as everyone else. Despite the sight of many bloggers, pundits, etc. treating us to their iron-clad certainty over the past week. P.S. Fred Kaplan has a helpful article up at Slate. Read more
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Today he starts off by laying into Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and goes on to tear the guys at the Weekly Standard a new one: The administration, justly criticized for its Iraq premises and their execution, is suddenly receiving some criticism so untethered from reality as to defy caricature. The national, ethnic and religious Read more
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The debate about the justness of Israel’s response to recent attacks by Hezbollah highlights what is, to me, one of the most difficult to understand aspects of Just-War Theory, namely, the criterion of “proportionality.” Proportionality has taken on increased importance in the last centruy or so because of the nature of modern warfare, but that Read more
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This essay by Randall Balmer, adapted from his new book Thy Kingdom Come: How the Religious Right Distorts the Faith and Threatens America: An Evangelical’s Lament (can we get a subtitle check here?) is sharply critical of the Religious Right, but can’t seem to make up its mind on whether it wants the Right to Read more
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Though my dear wife is still convalescing, I managed to pop off yesterday morning for an early “said mass” at the Church of the Advent in Boston. The service followed, more or less, the order for Holy Communion from the 1928 Book of Common Prayer, with which I’m not terribly familiar. I was struck, in Read more
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In a story in yesterday’s Boston Globe on congressional moves to overturn President Bush’s embryonic stem-cell research policy Tony Perkins, president of the Family Research Council, is quoted as saying that ESCR is “unethical and ineffective”: “The results speak for themselves,” he said. “Embryonic stem-cell research has produced no successful treatment for human beings, whereas Read more
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Abby came through her surgery like a champ and is doing well. Her mom and I are heading back to the hospital today to see her and if all goes well there’s a good chance she’ll be home tonight. Thanks for all your prayers and good wishes. Meanwhile, do read this post from Jim Henley Read more
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Before I sign off – I really like this piece from Father Greg Jones, who styles himself as an “Anglican centrist.” I’ve been wondering recently if there’s a future for people who are traditionalist or orthodox on theological matters (Christology, Trinity, etc.) but lean “liberal” on some of the contested hot button issues currently dividing Read more
