What are you reading?

When it just doesn't fit anywhere else.
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JimFoxvog
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Re: What are you reading?

Post by JimFoxvog »

A very illuminating book giving much light on recent US political history:

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INTRODUCTION

A QUIET DEAL IN DIXIE


As 1956 drew to a close, Colgate Whitehead Darden Jr., the president of the University of Virginia, feared for the future of his beloved state. The previous year, the U.S. Supreme Court had issued its second Brown v. Board of Education ruling, calling for the dismantling of segregation in public schools with “all deliberate speed.” In Virginia, outraged state officials responded with legislation to force the closure of any school that planned to comply. Some extremists called for ending public education entirely. Darden, who earlier in his career had been the governor, could barely stand to contemplate the damage such a rash move would inflict. Even the name of this plan, “massive resistance,” made his gentlemanly Virginia sound like Mississippi.

On his desk was a proposal, written by the man he had recently appointed chair of the economics department at UVA. Thirty-seven-year-old James McGill Buchanan liked to call himself a Tennessee country boy. But Darden knew better. No less a figure than Milton Friedman had extolled Buchanan’s potential. As Darden reviewed the document, he might have wondered if the newly hired economist had read his mind. For without mentioning the crisis at hand, Buchanan’s proposal put in writing what Darden was thinking: Virginia needed to find a better way to deal with the incursion on states’ rights represented by Brown.

To most Americans living in the North, Brown was a ruling to end segregated schools—nothing more, nothing less. And Virginia’s response was about race. But to men like Darden and Buchanan, two w ell-educated sons of the South who were deeply committed to its model of political economy, Brown boded a sea change on much more.

At a minimum, the federal courts could no longer be counted on to defer reflexively to states’ rights arguments. More concerning was the likelihood that the high court would be more willing to intervene when presented with compelling evidence that a state action was in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of “equal protection” under the law. States’ rights, in effect, were yielding in preeminence to individual rights. It was not difficult for either Darden or Buchanan to imagine how a court might now rule if presented with evidence of the state of Virginia’s archaic labor relations, its measures to suppress voting, or its efforts to buttress the power of reactionary rural whites by underrepresenting the moderate voters of the cities and suburbs of Northern Virginia. Federal meddling could rise to levels once unimaginable.

James McGill Buchanan was not a member of the Virginia elite. Nor is there any explicit evidence to suggest that for a white southerner of his day, he was uniquely racist or insensitive to the concept of equal treatment. And yet, somehow, all he saw in the Brown decision was coercion. And not just in the abstract. What the court ruling represented to him was personal. Northern liberals—the very people who looked down upon southern whites like him, he was sure—were now going to tell his people how to run their society. And to add insult to injury, he and people like him with property were no doubt going to be taxed more to pay for all the improvements that were now deemed necessary and proper for the state to make. What about his rights? Where did the federal government get the authority to engineer society to its liking and then send him and those like him the bill? Who represented their interests in all of this? I can fight this, he concluded. I want to fight this.

Find the resources, he proposed to Darden, for me to create a new center on the campus of the University of Virginia, and I will use this center to create a new school of political economy and social philosophy. It would be an academic center, rigorously so, but one with a quiet political agenda: to defeat the “perverted form” of liberalism that sought to destroy their way of life, “a social order,” as he described it, “built on individual liberty,” a term with its own coded meaning but one that Darden surely understood. The center, Buchanan promised, would train “a line of new thinkers” in how to argue against those seeking to impose an “increasing role of government in economic and social life.”
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AnthonyMartin
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Re: What are you reading?

Post by AnthonyMartin »

Philosophical Foundations for a Christian Worldview by J.P. Moreland and William Lane Craig
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Sudsy
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Re: What are you reading?

Post by Sudsy »

The Valley Of Vision

This is a collection of Puritan prayers and devotions.
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Pursuing a Kingdom life in the Spirit
MaxPC
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Re: What are you reading?

Post by MaxPC »

Still reading Chesterton-he was a prolific writer.
Along with my Bible.
MaxPC wrote:Re-reading the collected works of G.K. Chesterton, a humorist and advocate of common-sense in Christian apologetics.

Some of GK Chesterton’s better known quotes:
  • The Bible tells us to love our neighbors, and also to love our enemies; probably because generally they are the same people.
  • The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult; and left untried.
  • Without education, we are in a horrible and deadly danger of taking educated people seriously.
  • To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it.
  • If there were no God, there would be no atheists.
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Max (Plain Catholic)
Mt 24:35
Proverbs 18:2 A fool does not delight in understanding but only in revealing his own mind.
1 Corinthians 3:19 For the wisdom of this world is folly with God
temporal1
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Re: What are you reading?

Post by temporal1 »

MICROBE HUNTERS / PAUL de KRUIF 1890-1971

i have a 1926 copy of this book, i’ve been saving it for a few years for my granddaughter, now 15.
Knight-light recommended it for her. i haven’t heard from him since early pandemic days, maybe he’ll notice this.

The book is 12 chapter, with 8 illustrations.
.. The gods are frankly human, sharing in the weaknesses of mankind,
yet not untouched with a halo of divine Romance.”

E.H. BLAKENEY Harcourt, Brace and Company / New York
LibriVox Audiobooks / Microbe Hunters by Paul de Kruif read by Warren Kati Part 1/3 | Full Audio Book / 7+hrs


i’m not sure i can listen to the audiobook, the reading is pretty dry. But, good for pronunciation of names! :wave:

My grdaughter has a nice reading voice (we learned when she was in Catholic elementary school). They emphasized reading out loud, reading to groups, even in the earliest grades. She’s comfortable reading out loud. i’m grateful for that experience.

- - - - - - -

An aside, i don’t recall his name, but someone who did a lot of public speaking described how he attended a small one room school in Nebraska, he credited his teacher who was adamant about every student reading out loud to the class, no matter how shy, or what reading level.

It’s amazing where gifts+talents come from. God being the greatest factor. The unknown/unknowable quantity.


i’ll be giving it to her in person!
The last book i gave her she read over+over. :D

One day she texted from school asking about a title .. texting is forbidden in school!
It wasn’t for class. She was daydreaming. :lol:
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Most or all of this drama, humiliation, wasted taxpayer money could be spared -
with even modest attempt at presenting balanced facts from the start.


”We’re all just walking each other home.”
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temporal1
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Re: What are you reading?

Post by temporal1 »

i’m not sure i can listen to the audiobook, the reading is pretty dry.
But, good for pronunciation of names! :wave:
Ach! i’ve adjusted to the reader’s voice+style.
The content is far from dry! i can listen while doing other things, find myself smiling as i listen. Interesting.

i’m pretty sure this will appeal to my grdaughter .. i expect she will prefer to read, she usually does.

Thank you, Knight. Great summer reading.


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Most or all of this drama, humiliation, wasted taxpayer money could be spared -
with even modest attempt at presenting balanced facts from the start.


”We’re all just walking each other home.”
UNKNOWN
Marylander
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Re: What are you reading?

Post by Marylander »

The Contentment Dilemma: Examining Life's Mysteries and Purposes

Written by a young Horning man

Don't normally read books written by Mennonites but know the author.
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