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    News

    Acton Unwind

    Acton Unwind is a weekly roundtable discussion of news and current events through the Acton Institute’s lens on the world: promoting a free and virtuous society and connecting good intentions with sound economics. Host Eric Kohn is joined by Dr. Samuel Gregg and other Acton Institute experts for an exploration of news, politics, religion, and culture.

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    Copyright: © 375388 - Acton Institute 2023

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    Latest Episodes:
    Poverty: Not One Solution, But Many Dec 04, 2023

    Today, Eric and Dan talk with Acton’s Michael Matheson Miller about his essay “The Poverty Pyramid Scheme,” and AIER’s Samuel Gregg about his review “Mistaken About Poverty,” both of which appear in the Fall 2023 issue of our magazine RELIGION & LIBERTY, which is focused on the issue of poverty. How should we think about poverty in the developing world and in places like the United States? What conditions are necessary for people to rise out of poverty? What do social engineers get wrong about how we should address issues that contribute to poverty? And what is Acton’s new Center for Social Flourishing doing to advance the discussion on poverty?

    Subscribe to RELIGION & LIBERTY

    The Prosperity Pyramid Scheme | Michael Matheson Miller

    Mistaken About Poverty | Samuel Gregg

    Poverty, Inc.

    Reason, Faith, and the Struggle for Western Civilization | Samuel Gregg

    Afghanistan I fought for lacks foundation for freedom | Stephen Barrows


    Milei Wins the Day in Argentina Nov 27, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dylan, and Noah are joined by Acton Managing Director, International, Alex Chaufen to discuss Argentinian president-elect Javier Milei. Who is Milei? Is there anything to the comparisons American media are making to Donald Trump? Can he pull off changing Argentinian currency from the peso to the dollar?

    They also dive in to the temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hamas and the deal made to release hostages from the terrorist organization in exchange for Palestinian prisoners currently held in Israel. Will this be good for the war, and will this incentivize more hostage taking in the future?

    And finally, Senator Elizabeth Warren is warning us about a “sandwich shop monopoly” emerging from a deal that would unite Subway under the same ownership with Jimmy Johns and McAlisters. Because, you know, those are the only three options you have for lunch.

    Javier Milei will be Argentina’s first libertarian president | The Economist

    Israel, Hamas Reach Deal to Release 50 Hostages | Wall Street Journal

    Israel-Hamas War: Sides Near Hostage Release, Truce Extension | Wall Street Journal

    The FTC puts your lunch on its plate | Politico


    You Don’t Gotta to Hand It to Osama bin Laden Nov 20, 2023

    This week, Eric and Dan are joined by Philip Booth, professor of finance, public policy, and ethics at St. Mary’s University, Twickenham, England, to discuss his essay in the Fall 2023 issue of RELIGION & LIBERTY, "Creating an Economy of Inclusion.”

    Catholic Social Teaching has, for decades, provided both guidelines and cautions for market economies that exclude marginalized populations. The question is, however, are those populations excluded by markets or from markets? Eric and Dan then discuss the alleged surge in popularity for Osama bin Laden’s “Letter to America” on TikTok. Is this justification for the 9/11 attacks really as pronounced of a phenomenon as it was made out to be? Or were the people expressing horror and outrage about the trend helping to boost it into a bigger problem than it originally was?Is there a case to be made to ban the TikTok app? And finally, a number of American CEOs gathered in San Francisco to celebrate Chinese president Xi Jinping. How should we think about the interplay — and the apparent inextricable link — between the American and Chinese economies?


    Creating an Economy of Inclusion | Philip Booth, RELIGION & LIBERTY

    Subscribe to RELIGION & LIBERTY

    Videos About Bin Laden’s Criticism of U.S. Surge in Popularity on TikTok | New York Times

    How Osama bin Laden’s ‘Letter to America’ reached millions online | Washington Post

    When Product Markets Become Collective Traps: The Case of Social Media | University of Chicago

    Dinner with Xi in San Francisco: A Who’s Who of America’s Beijing-Friendly Elite | Jimmy Quinn, National Review


    MrBeast of Burden Nov 13, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Noah discuss the philanthropic efforts of MrBeast, the YouTube star with more than 200 million followers, in building wells in Kenya, which has come in for some criticism. Are MrBeast’s efforts making a positive impact, or are they worthy of the criticism they’re receiving? Or both? And what could he and other people with high profiles who seek to do good do differently? Next, the panel discusses the report from the pro-Israel outfit Honest Reporting about freelance photojournalists working for the Associated Press, Reuters, the New York Times, and others being embedded with Hamas on October 7. What questions about ethics in journalism does this raise? And finally, the University of Austin is open for business. But how successful will it be at attracting students and building a different way of providing higher education?

    MrBeast builds 100 wells in Africa, attracting praise – and some criticism | CNN

    Broken Borders: AP & Reuters Pictures of Hamas Atrocities Raise Ethical Questions | Honest Reporting

    Israel Accuses Freelance Photographers of Advance Knowledge of Oct. 7 Attack | New York Times

    Media watchdog says it was just ‘raising questions’ with insinuations about photographers and Hamas | Associated Press

    Watchdog accepts news orgs weren’t tipped off about Oct. 7: We just ‘raised questions’ | Times of Israel

    Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board gives first go-ahead to new University of Austin | Austin American-Statesman

    University of Austin Board of Advisors


    WeWork Don’t Work Anymore Nov 06, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dylan, and Emily work over the news that WeWork, a company that provides flexible office workspace, will file for bankruptcy this week. Was it a victim of the pandemic? A creature of a low-interest-rate economy and a venture-capital mentality that said they’d figure out how to be profitable at some point that never arrived? Both? Next, legendary and controversial college basketball coach Bobby Knight passed away last week at the age of 83. What does Knight’s ends-justify-the-means success tell us about civic, economic, and church life? And finally, nearly 3,000 former Morehouse College students had their student debt erased without any government action. Is it true that debt relief is yours if you want it, whether or not Washington intervenes?

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    WeWork plans to file for bankruptcy as early as next week, source says | Reuters

    Monetary Policy Is Working | Dominic Pino, National Review

    Legendary basketball coach Bob Knight dies at 83 | ESPN

    The Bobby Knight Problem | “The Rise & Fall of Mars Hill,” Christianity Today

    The Last Days of Knight | ESPN 30 for 30

    These former HBCU students owed their college nearly $10 million. The debt was just erased | USA Today

    Student Loans and the Sin of Usury | James Caton & Dylan Pahman, Acton Institute


    The Meltdown Over the Robert E. Lee Meltdown Oct 30, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Emily discuss the decision to melt down the statue of Robert E. Lee that was at the center of the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia. Is removing statues of Confederate generals erasing history? What is the proper way to memorialize the Confederacy, if there is one? And how should we think about and remember Robert E. Lee? Then the panel turns its attention to engagement farming on X (formerly known as Twitter) and Elon Musk’s announcement that posts with community notes correcting factual inaccuracies would no longer be eligible for the platform’s ad-revenue-sharing program. Is this a good way to fight misinformation online? Or will it just be gamed the same way ad revenue sharing is? And finally, was the Catholic Church's Synod on Synodality really, after all, just the friends we made along the way? How are we to interpret the 21,000-word report from the Synod? And what are we to make of its release coinciding with the news that a (briefly) excommunicated Jesuit priest accused of abuse has been returned to ministry?

    Charlottesville’s Lee statue meets its end, in a 2,250-degree furnace | Washington Post

    Removing statues won’t erase the past, could mar the future | Dan Hugger, Acton Institute

    Elon Musk on monetization on X | X (formerly known as Twitter)

    The Internet of Beefs | Venkatesh Rao, Ribbonfarm

    Synod report proposes ways to foster synodal Church | The Pillar

    Pope orders Vatican to reopen case of priest accused of adult abuse but allowed to keep ministering | Associated Press


    They Don’t Speaker for Us Oct 23, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss the Speaker of the House of Representatives, or more specifically, the lack of one. What does this situation say about how well-functioning, or not, our system of government is right now? What does it say about a possible decline in civic virtue in the United States? Then the guys turn their attention to the Israel-Hamas war and the Israeli airstrike on a hospital in Gaza that killed 500 people that turned out to not be an Israeli airstrike, that didn’t hit a hospital but its parking lot, and that didn’t kill hundreds of people. What does the way this story evolved reveal about modern media—and the prominence of social media in the news-gathering ecosystem? And finally, Ozempic is a drug that was developed for treating diabetes but is frequently used off-label for weight loss. Is it a miracle? Or should we be more skeptical about something that delivers incredible results without much work on the part of the person taking it?

    House GOP speaker race balloons to nine candidates | Axios

    NYT admits error in Gaza hospital report | Politico

    It's easy to screw up on breaking news. But you have to admit when you do. | Nate Silver

    The Dream of Scalable Democracy | Dylan Pahman, Law & Liberty

    What Is Ozempic and Why Is It Getting So Much Attention? | New York Times

    Desperate Indians want Ozempic on prescription. Huge shift from traditional drugs, say doctors | The Print

    How Weight Loss Drugs Stopped a Danish Recession | Apricitas Economics


    Anti-Semitism Rears Its Ugly Head Oct 17, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dylan, and Emily examine the purportedly pro-Palestinian rallies and campus protests that took place in the wake of the slaughter of Israeli Jews by Hamas terrorists. How surprised should we be by people chanting “gas the Jews” in Sydney, Australia, or by members of student organizations at Harvard University claiming that “the Israeli regime is entirely responsible for all unfolding violence”? What should be the consequences, if any, for people who have openly supported or defended the murder of Israelis by Hamas? Should universities and corporations end the practice of publishing a statement on every major issue? Then the panel reviews the awarding of the Nobel Prize in economics to Claudia Goldin for her work contributing to a better understanding of women’s participation in the labor force. And finally, is Bigfoot real, and did a couple vacationing in Colorado capture it on video? Probably not. But it’s fun to imagine. A Weekend on the Brink | The Morning DispatchAustralian pro-Palestinian protesters chant ‘gas the Jews’ as police warn Jewish people to stay away from area | Fox NewsCollege campus protests erupt across US ahead of anticipated Israel operation in Gaza | Fox NewsNYU law student group moves to oust president who cheered Hamas attack | New York PostAOC knocks ‘bigotry and callousness’ of Times Square rally for Palestinians | PoliticoA Stanford University instructor has been removed from the classroom amid reports they called Jewish students colonizers and downplayed the Holocaust | CNNStar of David is graffitied on Jewish homes in Berlin after Hamas attacks on Israel — in chilling echo of anti-Semitic persecution of the Jews under the Nazis | Daily MailWhy do some people hate the Jews? | Acton Line PodcastCollege Free Speech Rankings | Foundation for Individual Rights and ExpressionClaudia Goldin Is the Ideal Academic Researcher | Victor V. Claar & Angela K. Dills, Acton Institute‘Feels like a hoax’: Purported Bigfoot video from Colorado attracts skeptics, believers | USA Today


    Saving St. Louis & Terror in Israel Oct 09, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan are joined by Rachel Ferguson—director of the Center for Free Enterprise and assistant dean and professor of business ethics at Concordia University Chicago and an affiliate scholar at the Acton Institute—to discuss her essay in the most recent issue of RELIGION & LIBERTY, “Saving St. Louis One Block at a Time.” How did St. Louis end up in the state it’s in? How does neighborhood stabilization work? How is investing in single city blocks more effective than a panoply of government-initiated anti-poverty programs? How important is trust between citizens and law enforcement to these ends? Then the guys discuss the terrorist attacks by Hamas in Israel over the weekend. What will come next? What does this mean for efforts at peace accords between Israel and countries like Saudi Arabia? What should we make of the people pouring into the streets of American cities in support of the Palestinian cause, if not the actions of Hamas?

    Subscribe to RELIGION & LIBERTY

    Saving St. Louis One Block at a Time | Rachel Ferguson, RELIGION & LIBERTY

    A ‘Black Day’ in Israel | The Morning Dispatch

    Today Is Israel’s 9/11 | Noah Pollack, The Free Press

    Iran Helped Plot Attack on Israel Over Several Weeks | WSJ


    Synodality in Reality Oct 02, 2023

    This week, Eric, Emily, and Dylan tackle the Catholic Church Synod on Synodality taking place starting this week at the Vatican. What is the Synod on Synodality all about? What issues facing the Church—the ordination of women, the blessing of same-sex couples, married priests, and more—are on the table? What power does the Synod actually have? And could this Synod have just been an email? Next, the President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR, is up for renewal, and there are some conservative lawmakers who don’t want to renew it because of concerns over potential funding of abortion. Are those concerns valid? And if so, are they valid enough to scuttle what is largely agreed to be one of the most successfully public health programs in recent memory? And finally, California has raised the minimum wage for fast food workers to $20 an hour. What could go wrong? Quite a few things, actually. Say hello to your friendly new robot burger chef!

    Vatican Assembly Puts the Church’s Most Sensitive Issues on the Table | New York Times

    A Public Health Setback | New York Times

    Poverty, Inc.

    PovertyCure

    How to Have a Great and Holy Council | Dylan Pahman, Religion & Liberty Online

    New California law raises minimum wage for fast food workers to $20 per hour, among nation’s highest | Associated Press

    The social responsibility of Chick-fil-A is to make delicious sandwiches | Dylan Pahman, Religion & Liberty Online


    Did Compassionate Conservatism Kill Welfare Reform? Sep 25, 2023

    Marvin Olasky joins Eric and Noah this week to discuss his feature essay in the new Fall 2023 issue of RELIGION & LIBERTY, entitled “The Thrill and Chill of Compassionate Conservatism,” in which Marvin revisits two of his books: The Tragedy of American Compassion (1990) and Compassionate Conservatism (1999). What has transpired in terms of poverty intervention and amelioration on the federal, state, and local levels since their publication and the welfare reforms of the 1990s? Where are we doing now to address effectively issues of poverty in America? How has conservatism itself, and its expression through the Republican Party, changed since the compassionate conservatism days of George W. Bush’s first term? Next, the guys examine Sen. Josh Hawley’s proposal to cap credit card interest rates at 18%. How many unintended consequences would this produce if it were enacted? And finally, the headlines about a Canadian study on cash transfers claim it “debunks stereotypes of homeless people’s spending habits” and that cash transfers “reduce homelessness” and will supposedly enable them to save money. Are they sure about that?

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    The Thrill and Chill of Compassionate Conservatism | Marvin Olasky, Religion & Liberty

    Subscribe to Religion & Liberty and get 4 issues for $29.99/year

    The Law of Conservation of Welfare—And What Energy Source Can Transform It | Marvin Olasky @ Acton University 2023‘

    Americans are being crushed’: Sen. Josh Hawley wants to cap credit card APR at 18%—here’s his plan to help ‘working people’ | Yahoo Finance

    Unconditional cash transfers reduce homelessness | Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

    Payday Loans and Predatory Politicians | Eric Kohn, Foundation for Economic Education


    Has Organized Labor Overplayed Its Hand? Again? Sep 18, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss the United Auto Workers strike. Are the demands from the UAW reasonable? How should we think about trade unionization in America today? Are there any risks to the new strategy that the UAW is engaging in? Next, the guys evaluate the FDA’s decision to make Narcan, the treatment for opioid overdoses, available over the counter. Is this a good thing? What are the potential downsides, if any? And how do we need to look at ways to treat the underlying disease of the soul that’s driving addiction problems like the opioid epidemic? And finally, the truth is out there about “Mexican aliens.” The UFO kind, that is. Mexico’s Congress heard testimony as to their “authenticity.” The truth, however, is that it was all a sham. So why the big show?

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    What are the UAW strike demands?

    Here are the issues amid negotiations | Washington Post

    The UAW Labor-Strike Debacle | National Review

    How UAW Tossed Its Old Playbook and Pursued a Surprise-Attack Strike Strategy | Wall Street Journal

    More Michigan pharmacies will carry over-the-counter Narcan | ABC 12 News

    Michigan State Police trooper uses Narcan to save man from heroin overdose | MLive

    Mummies From Outer Space? Mexico’s Congress Gets a Firsthand Look. | New York Times


    What Is Populism’s Place in American Conservatism? Sep 11, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dylan, and Emily parse former vice president Mike Pence’s speech in New Hampshire, which was aimed at drawing distinctions between his definition of conservatism and the populism of the New Right and Donald Trump. Does Pence’s definition of the two in opposition to each other make sense? Or has populism always existed in American conservatism and on the left? Next, the panel looks at the implications for the Church of Scientology of the conviction and sentencing of former THAT ’70s SHOW co-star Danny Masterson to 30 years to life for rape. There are many people who would like to see Scientology lose its tax-exempt status and other constitutional protections, but what concerns should we have about the implications of those kinds of calls for other religions? And finally, the group reflects on the 22nd anniversary of September 11 and the passing of Jimmy Buffett.

    Pence Calls Trump’s Populism a ‘Road to Ruin’ for the G.O.P. | New York Times

    Conservatism vs. Populism Speech | Mike Pence for President

    The Dream of Scalable Democracy | Dylan Pahman, Law & Liberty

    Danny Masterson Sentenced to 30 Years to Life in Prison in Rape Retrial | TMZ

    Leah Remini Rips “Criminal” Scientology in Aftermath of Danny Masterson Prison Sentencing | Deadline

    A New York firefighter tells his story of 9/11 | Acton Line

    Bombs, guns, and drones cannot win a spiritual war (UPDATED) | Dylan Pahman, Religion & Liberty Online

    Jimmy Buffett, Roguish Bard of Island Escapism, Is Dead at 76 | New York Times


    To Indict, Swipe Right? Aug 28, 2023

    This week, guest host Dan Hugger is joined by Dylan Pahman and Emily Zanotti to discuss the Georgia election racketeering prosecution of former President Donald Trump. What is this case actually about, and how does it differ from the other Trump indictments? Are mug shots exploitative? Why did President Trump choose this moment to break his long Twitter silence?

    Then the panel examines last week’s Republican presidential debate. Have we leaned anything new about the candidates? How do we best think about the place of debates in our national life? Is Twitter/X the future of presidential politics?

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    Donald Trump says Georgia arrest and mugshot are a ‘travesty of justice’ | Telegraph.co.uk

    Georgia election racketeering prosecution | Wikipedia

    First Republican Presidential Debate Draws 12.8 Million Viewers | New York Times

    Trump’s Interview with Tucker Carlson Has More Than 150 Million ‘Views’ on X—Here’s Why That’s Misleading | Forbes.com

    Trump support grows among college-educated as primary foes fail to lock up group | Washington Examiner

    Nikki Haley turned Republican rumble into campaign momentum: Polls | Washington Examiner

    Image by Freepik

    photo credit: Fulton County Sheriff's Office via AP


    A Crisis in Masculinity? Aug 21, 2023

    This week, Eric and Dan are joined by Sarah Isgur, senior editor of The Dispatch, to examine whether there’s a crisis in masculinity. With the successes of feminism and the shift in gender roles and expectations, how do men grapple with society’s needing less of what they traditionally have provided? How is the internet and social media influencing this supposed crisis? Is it helping in any way, making things worse, or is it a mixed bag? Then the gang closes on two quickly minted internet celebrities: Oliver Anthony of “Rich Men North of Richmond” fame, and the “crazy plane lady” who appears to be rebranding herself after her “not real” meltdown.

    How to Bury a Billionaire | The Remnant with Jonah Goldberg

    Rethinking Sex: A Provocation | Christine Emba

    The Man in Me: Versions of the Male Experience | Ross Firestone

    The Internet of Beefs | Venkatesh Rao

    The Legal Academy, Episode 5: Eric Posner

    The Changing Face of Social Breakdown | Acton Line


    Is the New Right Fascist? Aug 07, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan are joined by James M. Patterson, associate professor of politics and chair of the politics department at Ave Maria University, to discuss his essay from the Summer 2023 issue of RELIGION & LIBERTY, “Is the New Right Fascist?” What is fascism, beyond the most common Orwellian definition “that which is not desirable”? How much of the radicalism of the New Right is driven by a lot of young members who are “very online”? How seriously should we take the arguments of these people, and how much should we engage with them?

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    Is the New Right Fascist? | James M. Patterson, Religion & Liberty

    Patrick Deneen’s Otherworldly Regime | Jonah Goldberg, Religion & Liberty

    The man vs. the myth: who was John Foster Dulles? | Acton Line

    Ron DeSantis fires staffer who shared video with fascist imagery | David Weigel & Shelby Talcott, Semafor

    Why Integralism Is an Ideology of Despair | James M. Patterson, Law & Liberty

    After Republican Virtue | James M. Patterson, Law & Liberty

    Fascist Economics | Wilhelm Röpke

    Ur-Fascism | Umberto Eco, The New York Review of Books

    What if We’re the Bad Guys Here? | David Brooks, New York Times


    Barbenheimer and the Future of the Movies Jul 31, 2023

    This week, Eric is joined by Daniel Baas and Titus Techera, Acton’s premier movie reviewer, to discuss all things cinema, including: the success of Oppenheimer (which Titus liked), the success of Barbie (which Titus did not like), and what it is that’s bringing people back to theaters. Also, is it really a big deal that Dune 2 will bump The Marvels out of IMAX theaters, since The Marvels wasn’t made for that format anyway? Is it all right that some movies hit you over the head with a message sledgehammer-like? And finally, what explains the surprise success of Sound of Freedom?

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    Barbie Is a Movie for Our Time. This Is a Bad Thing. | Titus Techera, Acton Institute

    Oppenheimer and the Last Great America | Titus Techera, Acton Institute

    Sound of Freedom Is a Clarion Call for More Christians in the Arts | Titus Techera, Acton Institute

    Overload: Will any shows from the Golden Age of TV endure? | Sonny Bunch, The Weekly Standard


    Conservatism Is Alive and Well Jul 24, 2023

    This week, Eric, Noah, and Emily are joined by Christine Rosen, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and author of the cover story in the Summer 2023 issue of RELIGION & LIBERTY entitled “The Death of Conservatism Is Greatly Exaggerated.” Why have there been so many attempts to declare American conservatism dead? Why do so many of them, and in particular a recent piece from Jon Askonas in Compact magazine, ignore the fact that so many of the criticisms the current “New Right” levels at conservatism and American life are not all that new? How should we grapple with the effects of technology on American life? And what is our politics supposed to be for, as opposed to what we’re using it for now? Next, they discuss an open letter primarily written by Harvard Law School professor Mark Tushnet calling for President Joe Biden to ignore Supreme Court rulings he doesn’t like. Does the left have a comprehensible legal philosophy? How much was the rise of the New Right derailed by the success of the Federalist Society and the Dobbs decision? And is this just a mirror version of what Harvard Law professor Adrian Vermeule is calling for? And finally, three members of our four-person panel have seen Oppenheimer. Was dropping the bomb on Japan the right decision?

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    The Death of Conservatism Is Greatly Exaggerated | Christine Rosen, RELIGION & LIBERTY

    Subscribe to RELIGION & LIBERTY

    Harvard’s Mark Tushnet Wants Joe Biden to Become a Dictator | Charles C.W. Cooke, National Review

    Oppenheimer and the Last Great America | Titus Techera, Acton Institute


    SCOTUS Says “No” to Compelled Speech, Again Jul 17, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Emily discuss the recent decision in the 303 Creative from the Supreme Court. Is bad journalism the major culprit in people misunderstanding both the holding in the case, as well as the very facts of it? How much does it matter that it’s a First Amendment speech case and not a First Amendment religious case? Next, they tackle the newly announced plan from the Biden administration to cancel a load of student loan debt and ask the question, this again? Then, they examine the story of Hunter Biden’s daughter who has not been accepted or acknowledge by President Biden. Is it fair to hold this against him when making a political analysis of his fitness for the office? And finally, they look at two stories – the elevation of Archbishop Victor Manuel Fernández, who authored a book 30 years ago titled “Heal Me with Your Mouth. The Art of Kissing,” to the Vatican’s Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, and the statements by Bishop Américo Aguiar about not seeking to convert people at World Youth Day – and ask the question: what’s up with the Catholic Church?


    303 Creative LLC v. Elenis | SCOTUS Blog

    Biden Thumps Nose At Supreme Court, Still Plans to Forgive Student Debt— In a Big Way | The Root

    Hunter Biden’s Daughter and a Tale of Two Families | New York Times

    ‘Heal Me with Your Mouth. The Art of Kissing.’ An old book sparks a new controversy in the Vatican | Associated Press

    World Youth Day and Converting Everyone to Christ | Bishop Robert Barron, Word on Fire

    Bishop Robert Barron: The Philosophical Roots of Wokeism | Acton Line




    The Violent Faith of Cormac McCarthy Jul 10, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Noah Gould, Acton’s Alumni and Student Programs manager, are joined by Jane Clark Scharl. Jane is the author of the essay “Blood of a Thousand Christs: The Violent Faith of Cormac McCarthy,” which appears in the Summer 2023 issue of RELIGION & LIBERTY. What are we to make of McCarthy’s style and the prevalence of violence in his works? Where is God in McCarthy’s work? How much is obscured by McCarthy’s unique and stripped down style? Then, Eric, Dan, and Noah discuss two of the recent big rulings by the Supreme Court: overturning affirmative action policies at elite universities and tossing out President Joe Biden’s student debt relief program.


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    About Jane Clark Scharl


    Blood of a Thousand Christs: The Violent Faith of Cormac McCarthy | J.C. Scharl, Religion & Liberty


    Student Debt Cancellation, Canceled | The Morning Dispatch


    Supreme Court Guts Affirmative Action | The Morning Dispatch


    photo credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS


    When Is a Coup Not a Coup? Jun 26, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss the coup attempt in Russia over the weekend, as the Wagner Group paramilitary organization marched from its position in Ukraine toward Moscow before suddenly calling off the revolt. What does this mean for Russian president Vladimir Putin and his war in Ukraine? Do we have reason to believe this was an actual revolt or coup attempt—or something orchestrated by Putin for his own purposes? Then the guys recap the tragic story of the OceanGate Titan submarine, which imploded while on a trip taking people to view the wreck of the Titanic. Is this, like the story of the Titanic itself, the high cost of hubris? Why do so many people so quickly retreat into making jokes about an awful tragedy?


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    Taking Putin Down a Peg | The Morning Dispatch


    Does Britain Have High or Low State Capacity? | Alex Tabarrok, Marginal Revolution


    Real estate is China's economic Achilles heel | Noah Smith, Noahpinion


    On Differences Between Urban & Rural China | Dan Wang


    The Hong Konger: Jimmy Lai’s Extraordinary Struggle for Freedom


    Titan sub implosion: What we know about catastrophic event | BBC


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


    Patrick Deneen and Our Otherworldly Postliberal “Future” Jun 19, 2023

    This week, Jonah Goldberg joins Eric, Dan, and Dylan to discuss his newly released review of Patrick Deneen’s book, "Regime Change: Toward a Postliberal Future.” Following on the success, or at least the popularity, of his last book, “Why Liberalism Failed,” does Deneen have solutions to the problems he sees in modern society? Does his scholarship hold up under scrutiny? And is that the odor of Marxism exuding from the book—or is it just the choice to name the final chapter after the famous speech by Lenin? Is there more to it than that? (Narrator: “There’s more to it than that.”) To close out, the guys comment on the passing of the novelist Cormac McCarthy and how his books understood and demonstrated the grotesque violence of man in a state of nature.


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    Patrick Deneen’s Otherworldly Regime | Jonah Goldberg, Acton Institute

    Liberalism Isn't Rule by Elites | Stephanie Slade, Reason Magazine

    ‘I Don’t Want to Violently Overthrow the Government. I Want Something Far More Revolutionary.’ | Politico Magazine

    Episode 150: Define Your Terms | The Editors Podcast, National Review

    Suicide of the West: How the Rebirth of Tribalism, Populism, Nationalism, and Identity Politics Is Destroying American Democracy | Jonah Goldberg

    Liberal Practice v. Liberal Theory | Daniel E. Burns, National Affairs


    From Peak Oil to Peak Liberalism | D.G. Hart, Journal of Markets & Morality

    What I Saw at the National Conservatism Conference | Dan Hugger, Acton Institute

    National Conservatism One Year Later | Dan Hugger, Acton Institute

    Cormac McCarthy, Novelist of a Darker America, Is Dead at 89 | New York Times


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


    The Trump Indictment and Whataboutism Jun 12, 2023

    This week, Eric and Dan are joined by Emily Zanotti, a new contributing editor at the Acton Institute, as they tackle the latest indictment of former president Donald Trump. Again we ask: Does the act of indicting a former president and current candidate for president alone render America a banana republic? What’s the difference between this case and cases of other prominent politicians—such as Joe Biden, Mike Pence, and Hillary Clinton—mishandling classified information? If there is a double standard at play, how do we rectify that situation to make it a single standard going forward? Next, the group examines comments by Bishop Athanasius Schneider that Catholics can’t suffer from depression. How should we think about the power of faith in the context of mental illness? How much of this is an overreaction to the seeming obsession with mental health problems in the modern world? And finally, we take a look at the lives of two very different people who passed away this week: Christian TV broadcaster and founder of Regent University Pat Robertson and the Unabomber, Ted Kaczynski.


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    Indictment of former president Donald Trump

    Trump Indicted Over Documents | The Morning Dispatch

    Catholics cannot be depressed | Bishop Athanasius Schneider, Twitter

    Died: Pat Robertson, Broadcast Pioneer Who Brought Christian TV to the Mainstream | Kate Shellnutt, Christianity Today

    Ted Kaczynski, ‘Unabomber’ Who Attacked Modern Life, Dies at 81 | New York Times


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    The Responsibility of Business Is Business Jun 05, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan talk conservative boycott culture: Bud Light, Target, the Los Angeles Dodgers, and more. If the social responsibility of business is to increase profits, as Milton Friedman said, is there a way we can return to that understanding? Or are we going to be stuck in a political tug-of-war where people on the left and the right want the oars of every institution pulling in the same direction—their direction? Next, they examine the newly passed debt ceiling deal. Will we ever find a way out of government-by-crisis so we can have a real conversation about the utterly irresponsible debt load the country is carrying? And finally, have you heard of the Marvin Heemeyer “Killdozer” story from 2004? If anyone tries to tell you he’s some kind of a hero, just a regular guy pushed to the limit by a capricious city government, don’t believe it. Eric lays out the real facts.


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    The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits | Milton Friedman, New York Times Magazine


    The social responsibility of Chick-fil-A is to make delicious sandwiches | Dylan Pahman, Acton Institute


    The Good That Business Does | Robert G. Kennedy


    To boycott or not to boycott Disney, that is the question | Dan Hugger, Acton Institute


    The Rise and Fall of the Spokestroll | Abe Greenwald, Commentary


    What’s in the US debt ceiling deal and who won? | BBC


    Marvin Heemeyer & The Killdozer | Wikipedia


    Tread (2019) Documentary


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    Under the Light of La Sombrita May 22, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan rummage around a grab bag of topics for this potpourri episode of the podcast. First up: The expiration of Title 42, the pandemic-era border-security measure. Will its going away create new problems at the border? Almost certainly. But the policy can’t stay if the pandemic is, according to the federal government, over. If Congress could find a way to do its job, it could reinstitute a similar policy. Next, a communist coffee shop in Toronto closes. Might it have been a good idea to be open before 9 a.m., when most people want coffee? The laws of economics and the marketplace will get you every time. Then, is it appropriate for women to wear yoga pants in public? Is it even appropriate to wear yoga pants for yoga? Penultimately, the guys marvel at the tale of La Sombrita, a piece of metal that’s supposed to provide light and shade at bus stops in Los Angeles that does neither and came at the low, low cost of $200,000 and three years in development. And finally, Pastor Tim Keller is remembered a few days after he passed away at the age of 72.


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    What Is Title 42? What Its End Means for Immigration and U.S.-Mexico Border | Wall Street Journal


    What Part of Legal Immigration Don’t You Understand? | Reason


    The Anarchist: Toronto's anti-capitalist cafe is permanently closing | Daily Hive


    DieWorkwear Twitter Thread on Yoga Pats and Menswear


    La Sombrita, or, How to Fail at Infrastructure | Cato Institute


    Engaging the Culture for Christ | Stephen O. Presley, Acton Institute


    Died: Tim Keller, New York City Pastor Who Modeled Winsome Witness | Christianity Today


    Photo Credit: @LADOTofficial Twitter


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    What’s Next for Pakistan and Turkey May 15, 2023

    This week on Acton Unwind, special guest panelist Farah Adeed along with Dan and Dylan discuss two major stories in the majority-Muslim world: the arrest and subsequent release of Pakistan’s former prime minister Imran Khan and Sunday’s election in Turkey.


    Farah is an incoming Ph.D. student in the Department of Political Science at Boston University and studies the role of religion in the nation-building process and democratization in Muslim-majority countries. He is also a former Emerging Leader at Acton.


    The panel begins with an examination of Imran Khan’s place in Pakistani public life, then move on to the larger political landscape of Pakistan, the place of the military establishment, and the role of Islam in public life.


    Next the panel turns to Sunday’s election in Turkey: What is the state of Turkish politics today in the wake of the election? Why was it both so close and so contentious? And what does the election suggest about the state of Turkey’s democratic institutions?


    Lastly, the panel examines how Islam can play a constructive role in the development of free and democratic institutions in the Muslim-majority world and what historical resources can inspire such reform and renewal.


    Arrest of Pakistan’s former Prime Minister Imran Khan was illegal, top court rules | CNN


    Former Pakistan prime minister Imran Khan released on bail | CNN


    Turkey’s Election Scenarios: The Good, the Bad, and the Scary | National Review


    Turkey’s Erdogan faces second round in fevered race for presidency | BBC


    Is Indonesia’s “Civil Islam” a model for the Muslim world? | Religion & Liberty Online


    Abolishing blasphemy laws in Pakistan will lead to more violence | Religion & Liberty Online


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    TikTok Bans the Acton Institute’s The Hong Konger Documentary May 08, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss the suspension of the Acton Institute’s TikTok account after it shared promotional content for our award-winning documentary feature film, The Hong Konger: Jimmy Lai’s Extraordinary Struggle for Freedom. Is it just a weird coincidence that these kinds of suspensions keep happening to accounts that share content that the Chinese Communist Party would disapprove of? How should we think about attempts by Congress to address the risks presented by the TikTok app, which funnels a ton of personal information back to its parent company, ByteDance, in China? Would banning the app even be effective at reducing such a threat to privacy? Next, the guys turn their attention to CPAC Hungary, the Conservative Political Action Conference’s latest international summit. What are the lessons we’re supposed to learn from Hungary that could actually apply to the United States, which is a vastly different country in almost every conceivable way?


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    TikTok Suspends a Film on Jimmy Lai | Wall Street Journal

    Banned by TikTok: The CCP Doesn’t Want You to See The Hong Konger | Isaac Willour, Acton Institute

    TikTok Claims ‘Technical Error’ Led to Suspension of Think Tank that Posted about Hong Kong | National Review

    Acton Institute on TikTok

    Stream The Hong Konger On Demand

    CPAC Hungary Speakers List

    The GOP-Hungary connection shaping the ’24 campaign | Axios

    I Was Banned From Entering CPAC Hungary’s ‘Woke Free Zone’ | Politico

    The Words TikTok Parent ByteDance May Be Watching You Say | Forbes


    Photo Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS


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    Housing, Fake Drake, and ‘Everything-Bagel Liberalism’­—All at Once! May 01, 2023

    This week, Dan, Dylan, and Stephen discuss recent housing policy proposals in Texas. What market-based reforms could lower housing costs? What should policymakers keep in mind when seeking to lower housing costs? What are the biggest political obstacles they face and how might moral arguments help in overcoming them? The panel’s ears then turn to the AI song stylings of “Fake Drake.” Is the music industry poised to be disrupted by AI? What sort of property rights are likely to emerge in the wake of AI disruption? Is all music just copying already? Are music and Muzak that different? Finally, our panel turns to a discussion of “Everything-Bagel Liberalism.” Why do progressives feel the need to satisfy all constituencies in every policy all at once? How can economics help translate policies from mere good intentions into real-world change?


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    Texas Looks To The Free Market To Tackle Housing Costs | Forbes


    An A.I. Hit of Fake ‘Drake’ and ‘The Weeknd’ Rattles the Music World | NY Times


    I Cloned Myself With AI. She Fooled My Bank and My Family. | Wall Street Journal


    Did Ed Sheeran ACTUALLY Plagiarize Marvin Gaye? | Adam Neely


    The Grotesque Legacy of Music as Property | Adam Neely


    The Problem With Everything-Bagel Liberalism | NY Times


    Every policy objective, all the time, all at once | Slow Boring







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    National Conservatism Revisited Apr 10, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss Dan’s essay in the Spring 2023 issue of RELIGION & LIBERTY magazine, “National Conservatism One Year Later,” revisiting the National Conservatism movement one year after his essay on his visit to the NatCon2 conference. What, if anything, do we now understand better about the NatCon movement? Does it stand apart from traditional American conservatism, or is it slowly being subsumed by the mainstream right? And where do the post-liberals and Catholic integralists figure into this movement, if at all? Then the guys turn their attention to the expulsion of two Democratic lawmakers in Tennessee from the State House. Was this move by Tennessee Republicans wise, prudent, or even necessary? Is it in keeping with a very NatCon mentality to turn all political fights up to 11? And finally, they take a look at the ProPublica story about the hospitality benefits billionaire Harlan Crow has provided over the years to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas. Is there any there-there to this story? Or is the simple appearance of impropriety bad enough to warrant concern?


    National Conservatism One Year Later | Dan Hugger, Religion & Liberty


    What I Saw at the National Conservatism Conference | Dan Hugger, Religion & Liberty


    Subscribe to Religion & Liberty


    The hundred-year war for American conservatism | Acton Line


    Tennessee House Ousts 2 Democratic Lawmakers: What You Need to Know | New York Times


    Clarence Thomas and the Billionaire | ProPublica


    Lawmakers Revive SCOTUS Ethics Debate | The Dispatch


    Photo Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS


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    How Not to React to the Trump Indictment and the Nashville Shooting Apr 03, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss what we know (and there’s still much we don’t know) about the indictment of former President Donald Trump by New York City District Attorney Alvin Bragg. Was it a wise move to indict Trump? Does indicting a former president for the first time in American history presage the “end of the republic”? Next, the guys discuss the horrible school shooting in Nashville and the quick descent into collectivist thinking on the part of both the political left and the political right. And finally, Dylan shares a horrifying AI-created video of Will Smith eating spaghetti that highlights just how far some AI technology has to go, while Eric uses it to make a point about what AI creators won’t allow to be created, like political satire of China’s president, Xi Jinping.


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    What We Know About the Indictment and Surrender of Donald Trump | New York Times


    6 Killed in Nashville School Shooting, Including 3 Children | New York Times


    The Lonely Man with a Gun | Russ Roberts


    AI-Generated Video of Will Smith Eating Spaghetti


    Midjourney CEO Says ‘Political Satire in China Is Pretty Not Okay,’ but Apparently Silencing Satire About Xi Jinping Is Pretty Okay | Techdirt



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    Tick Tock for TikTok? Mar 27, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss the new legislation in Utah restricting social media access for minors. Will it work? Is it a good idea? Will it even have a chance to take effect, as social media companies are certain to sue over it? Then, continuing on the same theme, the guys take a look at last week’s congressional hearings on TikTok. Did anyone come out of this looking good? Is a ban on TikTok inevitable now? Does Congress’s reason for banning TikTok even matter? And finally, Xi and Putin meet for a summit. What does that mean for the future of the war in Ukraine and for U.S.-China relations?


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    Kids in Utah will need parents’ OK to access social media | Associated Press

    Brad Wilcox on Twitter

    Utah's Governor Should Veto “Social Media Regulations” Bill S.B. 152 | Electronic Frontier Foundation

    Social Media Data from Jonathan Haidt

    Lawmakers’ Drive to Rein In TikTok Intensifies After CEO’s Testimony | Wall Street Journal

    Xi and Putin’s Burgeoning Bromance | The Morning Dispatch


    Republican or Not? | Saturday Night Live


    Photo Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS


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    The French Enlightened on Pensions Mar 20, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss the protests in France over the move by French president Emmanuel Macron to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64. How does France, and other countries facing the realities of math when it comes to their pension programs, navigate the reality that these kinds of reforms are simultaneously necessary and very unpopular? Next, the guys consider the alleged difficulty people are having defining “wokeness” in the wake of author Bethany Mandel’s going blank when asked to define the term on The Hill’s morning show, “Rising.” Is this just a rhetorical game? And finally, in the wake of the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank, the usual suspects have been calling for new financial regulations to address the allegedly risky behavior of SBV. But would any of these proposals have done anything to prevent the kind of incident that just occurred?



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    French Protests, Turning Violent, Aim to Override Macron’s Pension Overhaul | Wall Street Journal


    Bethany Mandel on “Rising”


    Bethany Mandel defines “wokeness”


    Of Course You Know What "Woke” Means | Freddie deBoer


    PC Art Class | The Kids in the Hall


    SVB Is DOA | Acton Unwind


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    SVB Is DOA Mar 13, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan discuss the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank and the actions of the federal government in response. How concerned should we be by the moral hazard problem of bailing out the depositors of the bank beyond the $250K that is insured by the FDIC? Does this expose how the Federal Reserve’s efforts to stifle inflation are riskier than many think? Next, they examine the report from the Department of Energy attributing, with “low confidence,” the outbreak of COVID-19 to a lab leak. What lessons should we take away from this about the perils of trying to determine in real time what is and is not misinformation, as the lab leak theory was labeled early on. And finally, Rod Dreher’s blog at The American Conservative is no more. Did Rod remain too long in an old world of blogging that no longer exists, to his detriment?

    Should businesses allow their employees to work remotely? Almost all employers and employees have wrestled with this question. More and more job-seekers are expecting remote-work flexibility, and COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns greatly accelerated this trend. But are employees really as productive working from home? Does remote work hurt company culture? Or could hybrid or remote options make businesses more successful? David Bahnsen, Founder of the Bahnsen Group, argues that remote work should be minimized. Dr. Raj Choudhury, remote work expert at Harvard Business School, argues that businesses should embrace hybrid and remote options. This debate took place as a part of the 2023 Business Matters conference.


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    The Second-Largest Bank Failure in U.S. History | The Morning Dispatch

    'It’s a Wonderful Life' Bank Run

    Lab Leak Most Likely Origin of Covid-19 Pandemic, Energy Department Now Says | Wall Street Journal

    How Rod Dreher’s Blog Got a Little “Too Weird” for The American Conservative | Vanity Fair

    Gary Shteyngart’s ‘Gentile Region’ | Rod Dreher, The American Conservative

    How Rod Dreher Caused an International Scandal in Eastern Europe | The Bulwark

    The Internet of Beefs | Venkatesh Rao, Ribbonfarm

    Which political tweets do best? | Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution


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    What Are You Searching for, Dave? Feb 27, 2023

    This week, Dan Hugger, Dan Churchwell, and Dylan Pahman discuss the question of artificial intelligence, particularly the software behind a series of AI chatbots that have become publicly available in the past year. What are the possible uses and abuses, especially when incorporated into search engines like Microsoft’s Bing? And what happens when they stop being polite and start acting as if they were alive?


    Then the panel discusses a paper presented last week by Dylan Pahman at the Intercollegiate Studies Institute’s American Politics and Government Summit. The paper, titled “A Brief, Christian Prehistory of American Liberalism,” addresses an ongoing and often contentious debate within the American conservative movement on the place of the liberal tradition within conservatism.


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    A science fiction magazine closed submissions after being bombarded with stories written by ChatGPT | Fast Company


    A Concerning Trend | Neil Clarke


    Bing Chat is blatantly, aggressively misaligned | Less Wrong


    Is Bing too belligerent? Microsoft looks to tame AI chatbot | AP News


    American Politics And Government Summit | ISI


    Photo Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS


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    Thoughts, and Especially Prayers, Matter Feb 20, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan start with a discussion of President’s Day, a holiday where we’ve collectivized all the Presidents of the United States of America – good, and, and indifferent – into one day of celebration. That means it’s an opportunity for Eric to once again highlight how awful Woodrow Wilson really was. Then, they move on to the horrific shooting at Michigan State University. Why is it a new trend for advocates of a particular set of political beliefs to respond to these incidents with “f*** your thoughts and prayers?” And, if we spent some time thinking and praying about our legal system and the way it works, what could we imagine doing differently that could help prevent incidents like this from happening again? Finally, they examine the new editing of certain works by Roald Dahl to remove potentially offensive words, phrases, and ideas. Thomas Bowdler, please call your office.


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    Timeline of events in Michigan State University shooting | Associated Press


    Statement from Michigan State Rep. Ranjeev Puri | Twitter


    The Michigan State University killer was previously charged with a felony but was still able to buy guns. Here’s why | CNN


    Critics reject changes to Roald Dahl books as censorship | Associated Press


    Sen. Josh Hawley wants to create a legal age to be allowed on social media | NBC News


    But What If We're Wrong?: Thinking About the Present As If It Were the Past | Chuck Klosterman


    'Fahrenheit 451' Was Once Sanitized for Public Schools | Reason


    Photo Credit: ASSOCIATED PRESS


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    What’s Wrong with Journalism Today? Feb 13, 2023

    Today Eric, Dan, and Dylan are joined by Terry Mattingly of GetReligion.org to discuss his essay in the Winter 2022 edition of Religion & Liberty, "The Evolving Religion of Journalism.” How has journalism—and its audience—changed, and why? Has the internet transformed broadcasting into narrowcasting? How has a transition from the old bias of liberalism to illiberalism, even “Jacobinism,” remade what journalists produce and we consume? Then the guys look at the Super Bowl ads and explore why they seem to be less entertaining and mostly just celebrities in different unfunny situations. And was the Super Bowl ad that drew the most attention an ad for Jesus?


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    The Evolving Religion of Journalism | Terry Mattingly, Religion & Liberty

    Subscribe to Religion & Liberty

    GetReligion.org

    Overload: Will any shows from the Golden Age of TV endure? | Sonny Bunch, The Washington Examiner

    Put the State of the Union address out of its misery | Eric Kohn, Acton Institute

    Super Bowl commercials, from Adam Driver(s) to M&M candies; the hits and the misses | NPR

    Plug-In: Around 100 million Super Bowl viewers saw new commercials — about Jesus? | Get Religion


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    Popping the China Balloon Story Feb 06, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan try to pump the hot air out of the Chinese surveillance-balloon story. What was China up to? Should we have shot it down earlier? Was the purpose to induce Secretary of State Anthony Blinken to cancel his visit? Then the guys turn their attention to the murder of Tyre Nichols in Memphis. Is this an example of the police department and the city acting appropriately in quickly firing the officers involved? How can we use this awful tragedy to make changes that will result in increased trust between the police and citizens? And finally, a presentation at the World Economic Forum suggests that wearable technology will soon enable the reading of brainwaves, which employers could allegedly use to make us more productive, or police could use to prevent crimes before they happen. Are we really on the cusp of Minority Report? Or does this whole idea misunderstand the nature of the human person?


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    Timeline: A Chinese spy balloon’s 7-day trip across the United States | Politico


    Here is a timeline of events in the death of Tyre Nichols | New York Times


    Davos AM23 — Ready for Brain Transparency? | World Economic Forum


    The Metaverse Does Not Exist | Dan Hugger, Acton Institute


    Suppose You Were an Idiot: On the Importance of Acknowledging Incompetence | Public Discourse


    A Multi-Level Bayesian Analysis of Racial Bias in Police Shootings at the County-Level in the United States, 2011–2014 | PLOS ONE


    Towards a Pure Theory of Threat Systems | The American Economic Review




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    Ticketmaster Haters Gonna Hate, Hate, Hate Jan 30, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan breakdown the Ticketmaster/Taylor Swift ticket sale controversy in the wake of the proprietors of Live Nation Entertainment being dragged before Congress for a hearing. Are they a monopoly? If so, how would we know, and what should we do? And what is more offensive: Ticketmaster’s expensive fees and crashing website or a dozen U.S. senators reading questions written for them by junior staffers with Taylor Swift lyrics in them? Next, it’s 90 seconds until midnight on the Doomsday Clock, the PR gimmick of the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists that allegedly predicts the apocalypse. Should we take it seriously, or is this another case of “scientism” instead of science—people with expertise in one area getting out of their lane? And finally, Big Tech has big layoffs. Maybe these companies aren’t the all-powerful behemoths both sides of the political aisle make them out to be.


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    Ticketmaster Faces the Music | The Morning Dispatch


    52 Seconds of U.S. Senators Quoting Taylor Swift Lyrics


    The Doomsday Clock reveals how close we are to total annihilation | CNN


    ‘Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists’ Demands $10 Trillion or It Will Destroy Earth by Setting Clock to Midnight | The Onion


    The Tech Bubble Burst | The Dispatch



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    The Conscience of a Defenseman Jan 23, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan review the story of Ivan Provorov, the defenseman for the National Hockey League’s Philadelphia Flyers who skipped participating in warmups in a Pride-themed jersey before the team’s Pride Night game, citing his Russian Orthodox religious beliefs as the reason. Should this even be a story? Should NHL or other professional sports teams impose political stances and social causes on players? Then the guys look at the upcoming fight over raising the nation’s debt ceiling. If this isn’t the time to have a serious conversation about spending and debt, when is? And finally, they examine the enigma that is Rep. George Santos, who has come under fire recently for numerous inflated claims about his résumé and background. What drives people to lie about themselves, and to such an extent, when the truth can be so easily found out?


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    Flyers’ Provorov cites religion for boycott on Pride night | Associated Press

    Understanding the Debt Ceiling Debate | The Morning Dispatch

    James M. Buchanan on the Ethics of Public Debt and Default | James E. Alvey, Journal of Markets & Morality

    George Santos: Everything the Embattled Congressman Has Lied About | Forbes


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    Are We Mishandling Biden’s Mishandled Documents? Jan 16, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan examine the revelations that President Biden, when he was Vice President Biden, mishandled classified documents, similar in some ways to how former President Trump mishandled “Top Secret” documents he took from the White House as his presidency ended. With such serious questions on offer about how much information we classify and inconsistencies in how we punish people who mishandle it, why are so many people focusing only on questions of hypocrisy on Biden’s part? Next, the guys turn to the storming of the capitol and other government buildings in Brazil by supporters of former President Jair Bolsonaro. Even as it conjures comparisons to January 6 in the U.S., is that the most helpful lens through which to examine this story? And finally, the constantly wrong Paul Ehrlich is back, having been featured on a “60 Minutes” segment about mass extinction, to declare himself to be the embodiment of science. How wrong can one biologist be? Very, it turns out.


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    Biden White House Mounts Absurd Defense on Classified-Document Discoveries | National Review

    Mar-a-Lago Madness | The Re-Education with Eli Lake

    The Dream of Scalable Democracy | Dylan Pahman, Law & Liberty

    True Liberty Demands Respectful Disagreement | Dylan Pahman, Acton Institute

    Welcome to the Internet | Bo Burnham (NSFW language)

    Bolsonaro Supporters Wreak Havoc on Brasília | The Morning Dispatch

    Letter from Birmingham Jail | Martin Luther King, Jr.

    Scientists say planet in midst of sixth mass extinction, Earth's wildlife running out of places to live | 60 Minutes

    60 Minutes Promotes Paul Ehrlich's Failed Doomsaying One More Time | Ronald Bailey, Reason

    Paul Ehrlich: Wrong on 60 Minutes and for Almost 60 Years | FEE


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    Remembering Benedict XVI Jan 09, 2023

    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan remember the life and legacy of Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI. What will be his enduring contributions to theology and to the Catholic faith? And how will his decision to resign the papacy, the first time in 600 years that this occurred, and handling of the Church’s sex abuse scandal be factored into his legacy? Then the guys turn their attention to Rep. Kevin McCarthy’s election as Speaker of the House after 15 rounds of voting. Is this a glorious mess that points to a return to normal order in the House? Or a sign of complete disarray in Congress and the Republican Party? Both? Finally, they examine the injury to Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin during last week’s Monday Night Football game. Was the rush to resume the game, which was finally postponed, an indictment of our obsession with sports above the health and safety of the players?


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    Benedict XVI, First Modern Pope to Resign, Dies at 95 | New York Times


    Pope Benedict XVI: 1927-2022 | Joshua Gregor, Acton Institute


    Caritas in Veritate | Pope Benedict XVI


    Introduction to Christianity | Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger


    Jesus of Nazareth | Pope Benedict XVI


    ‘In the Beginning…': A Catholic Understanding of the Story of Creation and the Fall | Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger


    Foundations of a Free & Virtuous Society | Dylan Pahman, Acton Institute


    The House Speaker Battle’s Dramatic Conclusion | The Morning Dispatch


    What to Know About Damar Hamlin’s Injury | New York Times


    More than $8 million has been raised to support a charity backed by NFL star Damar Hamlin | Insider



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    China Relents On Zero-COVID Policies Dec 19, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman discuss China’s decision to relent on their “zero-COVID policies. With an ineffective vaccine and much of the older population unvaccinated, what happens if the current COVID variant rips through the country with a huge death toll? And why did China, which is clearly indifferent to human life, even decide to engage in these policies in the first place? Then the guys examine the release of Trump NFTs, which raised $4.5 million for the former president. Is there any current value to NFTs aside from the value people place on them by buying them? And finally, Eric, Dan, and Dylan make some traditional, and nontraditional, Christmas-movie recommendations.


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    From Zero Covid to No Plan: Behind China’s Pandemic U-Turn | New York Times


    Donald Trump's NFT Trading Cards Sell Out, Raise Over $5M | CNET


    Remember Alf? He’s back! In pog form.


    Christmas Movies:


    Dylan: Spirited & Jingle All the Way


    Dan: It’s A Wonderful Life & The Muppet Christmas Carol


    Eric: The Muppet Christmas Carol & Die Hard


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    How Important Are the “Twitter Files” and Twitter Itself? Dec 12, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman tackle the “Twitter Files,” the internal documents from the social media company that have been released by several independent journalists like Matt Taibbi and Bari Weiss. What, if anything, do they tell us about the way Twitter was run previously? Is there even enough information in what was released to draw meaningful conclusions about the pre–Elon Musk regime? Next, with Jimmy Lai sentenced to more than five years for his conviction on “fraud” charges, what will this mean for his upcoming National Security Law trial? And finally, is Christmas over-commercialized? And does it really matter if it is?


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    Twitter Files Part 1 | Matt Taibbi


    Twitter Files Part 2 | Bari Weiss


    Twitter Files Part 3 | Matt Taibbi


    Twitter Files Part 4 | Michael Shellenberger


    Elon Musk and Tucker Carlson Don’t Understand the First Amendment | David French, The Atlantic


    Jimmy Lai Gets 5 Years for Fraud as He Awaits Trial | Isaac Willour, Acton Institute


    The Hong Konger Film Website


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    Ukraine Moves to Ban Russian Orthodox Church Dec 05, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman discuss the move by Ukraine’s government to prevent churches affiliated with Moscow from operating in Ukraine. How dangerous is this? And why is trying to determine what constitutes a legitimate religion always problematic? Then the guys turn their attention to the protests in China and the delay of Jimmy Lai’s National Security Law trial in Hong Kong. How big of a threat to the Chinese Communist Party are these protests? And why should we focus more on marginal improvements in places like China and Hong Kong than on big revolutionary changes? Finally, they take stock of Kanye West’s public meltdown and his promotion of anti-Semitic ideology.


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    Zelensky proposes preventing Orthodox churches ‘affiliated’ with Moscow from operating in Ukraine | New York Times

    Man, Religion, and Tribalism | Joseph Pearce, The Imaginative Conservative

    Protests in China are about much more than COVID lockdowns | Rev. Robert Sirico, Fox News

    Hong Kong Blocks Visa for British Lawyer in Lai Trial | Isaac Willour, Acton Institute

    Trailer for ‘The Hong Konger’

    Website for ‘The Hong Konger’

    The Kanye/Kyrie storm, an explainer | Rachel Ferguson, Christian Post

    Why do some people hate the Jews? | Acton Line


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    Sam Bankman-Fried's Fall & The Sentencing of Elizabeth Holmes Nov 21, 2022

    This week, Dan Hugger, Michael Matheson Miller, and Stephen Barrows examine the collapse of the crypto currency exchange FTX and the sentencing of former Theranos CEO Elizabeth Holmes. How should we think about fraud in business? What is the role of corporate governance in securing the common good? How should investors and prospective clients best do their due diligence on companies they use and invest in? How do disreputable corporate leaders utilize regulatory and ideological capture to deceive? Is crypto currency itself a scam? What is the role of conscience in business and what does justice and repentance look like for disgraced business leaders?


    Sam Bankman-Fried’s Alameda quietly used FTX customer funds for trading, say sources | CNBC


    The Collapse of a Cryptocurrency Guru | Titus Techera, Acton Institute


    Emoji for expenses, penthouses and slipshod accounting: The most damning details from new FTX CEO’s report | CNBC


    Sam Bankman-Fried tries to explain himself | Vox


    How FTX bought its way to become the 'most regulated' crypto exchange | Reuters


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    What the Midterm Elections Say About American Civic Health Nov 14, 2022

    What the Midterm Elections Say About American Civic Health


    This week, Eric, Dan, and Dylan take a look at the surprising 2022 midterm election results to break down what they say about the health of American civic and political life. What does it mean that we’re seeing record participation in the political process but increasing dissatisfaction with the state of political life? What impact did the issue of abortion have, and did we all underestimate how important it would be? Then Dan gives an update on the latest from Ukraine as we approach the G20 meeting.


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    Zelenskiy visits recaptured Kherson, vows to drive Russia from all of Ukraine | Reuters


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    Is Affirmative Action History? Nov 07, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman discuss affirmative action in college admissions shortly after two cases involving the University of North Carolina and Harvard were argued before the Supreme Court. Was affirmative action ever justified in college admissions? If so, is it still justified? And if it goes, should it be replaced with something else to help the historically disadvantaged? Then the guys examine a recent study highlighting the positive benefits to the environment from Catholics’ abstaining from meat on Fridays. Is this the right lens through which to consider a return to meatless Fridays year-round? And finally, tomorrow is Election Day. How should we think about voting as part of our personal civic involvement? Is there every a good reason to abstain?


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    Creation and the Heart of Man: An Orthodox Christian Perspective on Environmentalism | Fr. Michael Butler & Andrew P. Morriss


    Why Many Smart, Low-Income Students Don't Apply to Elite Schools | NPR


    Nearer, My God: An Autobiography of Faith | William F. Buckley, Jr.


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    Musk sinks his teeth into Twitter Oct 31, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn and Dan Hugger discuss Elon Musk’s finalized takeover of Twitter. Can he make it better? Is it possible to make Twitter better? Perhaps more important to Musk, can he make it profitable? And will Musk’s acquisition change the nature of the platform in how it serves as a public salon for the media elite? Then the guys discuss the presidential election in Brazil. What does the defeat of Jair Bolsonaro mean for Brazil and for the rise of populist leaders worldwide?


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    Elon Musk Is Said to Have Ordered Job Cuts Across Twitter | New York Times


    Elon Musk says Twitter blue tick to be revamped | BBC


    Twitter will be no worse with owner Elon Musk, and probably no better | Eric Kohn, Acton Institute


    Brazil Elects Lula, a Leftist Former Leader, in a Rebuke of Bolsonaro | New York Times


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    Truss Interrupted Oct 24, 2022

    This week, Dan Hugger, Dylan Pahman, and John Pinheiro discuss the undoing of the Truss government in the United Kingdom. What caused the unraveling? Does “neoliberalism” have a future? What does the current political crisis in the United Kingdom tell us about the future of American conservatism and the right more generally? How should this inform our thinking about the conflict between classical liberals and the “New Right”?


    Our panel then explores technology through the lens of the new “Unplugged Scholarship” being offered at Franciscan University of Steubenville. Is this the way forward in education, or indeed life?


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    For Britain’s PM, Chaos Has Consequences


    New Avatars for the Right | Law & Liberty


    Classical liberalism vs. The New Right | Marginal Revolution


    Boris Johnson returns to UK in bid for rapid political comeback | Reuters


    Innovative Scholarship Confronts Crisis of Smartphone Addiction | Franciscan University of Steubenville


    Innovative Steps to Reclaim a Human Way of Life for the Next Generation | Newsweek


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    The Iranian Uprising (Almost) No One Is Talking About Oct 17, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman discuss the protests in Iran over the death of a 22-year-old woman who had been arrested for improperly covering her head. Why isn’t there more media coverage of these protests after five weeks? Is the Iranian regime actually in danger? And what, if anything, should countries like the United States being doing to encourage these human rights protesters? Then the guys examine a new study from the Center for the Study of Partisanship and Ideology on the striking lack of intellectual diversity on elite college campuses. Should we be surprised that places like Harvard, Yale, and Smith College are so unrepresentative? Should we even expect them to be?


    Iran Protests Spread With Uprising at Prison | Wall Street Journal


    Mahsa Amini: How one woman's death sparked Iran protests | BBC


    Diverse and Divided: A Political Demography of American Elite Students | CSPI


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    Columbus or Indigenous People's Day: Why not both? Oct 10, 2022

    This week, Dan Hugger is joined by Sarah Negri and John Pinheiro to discuss the national debate around Columbus Day and the ongoing escalation of the war in Ukraine. What should we as American’s in general, and Christian’s in particular mark of Columbus’s Legacy? What is Indigenous Peoples’ Day and need its celebration be in conflict with Columbus Day? What is the relationship between Columbus Day and the Italian American Community? What do the latest escalations by the Russian Federation kinetic, political, and rhetorical mean for the future of Ukraine? Is peace possible? Should we take the threat of nuclear escalation seriously? How should the international community respond?


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    Russia launches biggest air strikes since start of Ukraine war | Rueters


    Putin signs annexation of Ukrainian regions as losses mount | AP News


    Poland suggests hosting US nuclear weapons amid growing fears of Putin’s threats | The Guardian


    Russia’s Nuclear Bluster Is a Sign of Panic | The Atlantic


    In S.D., it's Native Americans' Day, not Columbus Day | Argus Leader


    Hochul, Zeldin find common ground: Columbus Day won’t be canceled despite ‘woke’ push | New York Post


    N.J. district eliminates Columbus Day as a school holiday over objections of Italian American groups | NJ.com


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    Into the Metaverse Oct 03, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn is joined by Dan Hugger and Dan Churchwell to discuss the theme of the Fall 2022 issue of Acton’s magazine, Religion & Liberty: What is the metaverse? What is its relationship to science fiction literature? And what is the impact of technology on society and culture, and how we should think through the consequences, intended and unintended, of technology and the metaverse on our lives?

    Dan Hugger’s Fall 2022 R&L cover story is entitled, “The Metaverse Does Not Exist.”

    Dan Churchwell’s review essay, which also appears in the issue, is entitled, “The Screen Is Not Your Master.”


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    The Metaverse Does Not Exist | Dan Hugger, Religion & Liberty

    The Screen Is Not Your Master | Dan Churchwell, Religion & Liberty (forthcoming)

    Overload: Will any shows from the Golden Age of TV endure? | Sonny Bunch, The Weekly Standard

    The changing face of social breakdown | Acton Line

    The Changing Face of Social Breakdown | Yuval Levin, The Dispatch


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    What happened at NatCon3? Sep 26, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn and Dan Hugger are joined by two special guests—Stephanie Slade, senior editor at Reason magazine and Fellow in Liberal Studies at the Acton Institute, and Jack Butler, submissions editor at National Review—both of whom attended the National Conservatism 3 conference, to discuss all things pertaining to the conference and the National Conservatism movement.


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    The Will to Power Was Front and Center at NatCon III | Stephanie Slade, Reason

    Both Left and Right Are Converging on Authoritarianism | Stephanie Slade, Reason

    Four Myths About National Conservatism You Should Stop Believing | David Brog, The Federalist

    National Conservatism and the Declaration | David Tucker, Law & Liberty

    National Conservatism and Its Enemies | Religion & Liberty

    What I Saw at the National Conservatism Conference | Dan Hugger, Religion & Liberty

    National Conservatism: A Primer for the Uninitiated | Josh Hammer, Newsweek

    National Conservatism: A Statement of Principles | The American Conservative

    The hundred-year war for American conservatism | Acton Line


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    The New York Times Takes Aim at Orthodox Jewish Education Sep 19, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman are joined by special guest Rabbi Jonathan Greenberg to discuss the recent New York Times article on New York City’s Orthodox yeshivas. Is the Times piece fair? What interest does the state have in the kind of education the children in Hasidic enclaves in New York City are receiving? And is America becoming increasingly inhospitable to Jews? Then the guys discuss the move by some state governors to send migrants who arrive at the southern border to so-called sanctuary cities. Is this a defensible policy, with the supposed ends justifying using fellow humans as the means of making a political point?


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    In Hasidic Enclaves, Failing Private Schools Flush with Public Money | New York Times

    The Jews of the Jews | Moshe Krakowski, Commentary

    The Plot Against Jewish Education | Liel Leibovitz, Tablet Magazine

    New York State vs. the Yeshivas | Eli Spitzer, Mosaic Magazine

    Religious Liberty in the States | Center for Religion, Culture & Democracy


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    Remembering Queen Elizabeth II & Mikhail Gorbachev Sep 12, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman discuss the legacies of two world leaders who have recently passed: Queen Elizabeth II of England and former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. How should these two very different figures be remembered, and what will be their enduring legacies? How should we think about the legacy of the British Empire, which was dissolved under Queen Elizabeth’s reign with the end of British rule in Hong Kong? And how much credit should Gorbachev get for the dissolution of the Soviet Union under his watch when this was never his intention? And finally, the guys discuss the ongoing National Conservatism 3 conference and the status of that movement.


    Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II (1926–2022) | Richard Turnbull, Acton Institute


    Would Kuyper go to Mars? | Dylan Pahman, Acton Institute


    Gorbachev Pizza Hut commercial


    What I Saw at the National Conservatism Conference | Dan Hugger, Acton Institute


    National Conservatism and Its Enemies | Religion & Liberty Winter-Spring 2022

    National Conservatism and Its Enemies | Religion & Liberty Winter-Spring 2022


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    Is there a case for canceling student loan debt? Aug 29, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, John Pinheiro, and Dylan Pahman discuss every angle of the executive order from President Joe Biden granting up to $20,000 of student-loan-debt forgiveness to qualifying individuals. Is there a solid legal case for doing this? Can one argue persuasively that transferring debts from those who incurred them to those who did not—namely, the American taxpayers—is in any way just? Does it make sense to take this action without addressing the deeper problems in the student loan and higher education system, which debt-relief advocates themselves portray as predatory? How do we address the cultural problems that exist in the system—namely, the increased expectation that everyone should go to college?


    Student Loan Debt Statistics: 2022 | NerdWallet


    Untangling the college loan crisis | Anne Rathbone Bradley, Religion & Liberty


    Is There a Christian Case for Biden’s Debt Relief Plan? | David French, The Dispatch


    Blue Collar Intellectuals: When the Enlightened and the Everyman Elevated America | Daniel J. Flynn


    Millennials and Marriage | Rachel Lu, Public Discourse


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    Afghanistan, one year later Aug 22, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman reflect on what has transpired in Afghanistan in the year since the withdrawal of American forces from the country. Could the inevitable withdrawal have been better planned to prevent the debacle that ensued? What is the current state of the country’s economy, and of the rights of women and children? Could things be worse? Then the guys turn their attention to a possible earthquake in the American public school system, as major cities see declining enrollments while states like Arizona make large expansions to school-choice programs. What happens when these unstoppable forces meet the immovable object of teachers unions?


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    The Taliban retake Afghanistan | Acton Unwind


    Have the Taliban changed? | Acton Unwind


    Afghanistan, One Year Later | The Morning Dispatch


    Lawmakers Still Wrestle With Biden’s Chaotic Afghanistan Withdrawal | The Dispatch


    Afghanistan's Economic Collapse | The Morning Dispatch


    After just 68 days of summer, Chicago Public Schools’ new year starts Monday. Here’s what you need to know. | Chicago Tribune


    One-third of Chicago Public Schools are half full | Illinois Policy Institute


    Universal school vouchers: What you should know about the bill that Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey signed into law | Fox 10 Phoenix


    Inside the Massive Effort to Change the Way Kids Are Taught to Read | Yahoo News


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    No one is above the law or beneath contempt in Trump raid Aug 15, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman explore some of the big picture questions raised in the wake of the FBI's executing a search warrant for Trump’s Florida digs, Mar-a-Lago. How should we balance practical political concerns with questions of the rule of law? Would more transparency help? Or would breaking the Department of Justice’s protocol, as former FBI director Jim Comey did about the Hillary Clinton private-server investigation, cause more harm than good? And are we capable of viewing a former president as just another American citizen once he’s left office? Then the guys reflect on the reaction to the violent attack on novelist Salman Rushdie last week. While news outlets claim we’re still searching for a motive for the attack, Iran affirmed the fatwa and bounty on Rushdie’s life, so what’s the mystery? And finally, a piece in The Atlantic accuses rad-trad Catholics of “weaponizing” the rosary. While the original incendiary title has since been edited, wouldn’t it save a lot of embarrassment to have at least one person of faith around to avoid making basic mistakes?


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    The FBI’s Mar-a-Lago ‘Raid’: It’s about the Capitol Riot, Not the Mishandling of Classified Information | Andrew C. McCarthy, National Review


    Do We Believe Our Own Dogma? | Kevin Williamson, National Review


    What Comes Next After Mar-a-Lago Search | Morning Dispatch, The Dispatch


    Thinking Through the Trump Search | David French, The Dispatch


    Salman Rushdie recovering from 'life changing' injuries after he was stabbed on stage. Here's what we know | CNN


    Abolishing blasphemy laws in Pakistan will lead to more violence | Farah Adeed, Acton Institute


    How Extremist Gun Culture Is Trying to Co-Opt the Rosary | The Atlantic


    Original headline and image for Atlantic article


    GetReligion


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    The future of Roe isn’t as simple as pro-lifers may think Aug 08, 2022

    This week, guest host Dan Hugger, Sarah Negri, and Dylan Pahman discuss the diplomatic crisis unfolding in the wake of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s visit to Taiwan. How should the United States respond to an increasingly aggressive Communist China? From there the discussion turns to the recent defeat of the proposed Value Them Both Amendment to the Kansas Constitution. What can we learn about the future of the abortion debate in America from this result? Then we discuss the recent Republican primary election in Michigan’s 3rd congressional district between John Gibbs and Congressman Peter Meijer. What does this close race tell us about the state of the Republican Party and the near-future prospects for American politics at large?

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    Pelosi has landed in Taiwan. Here's why that's a big deal | NPR

    Nancy Pelosi: Why I’m leading a congressional delegation to Taiwan | The Washington Post

    Furious China fires missiles near Taiwan in drills after Pelosi visit | Reuters

    Right to abortion protected by Kansas Constitution, state Supreme Court rules | The Wichita Eagle

    'No' prevails: Kansas votes to protect abortion rights in state constitution | The Kansas City Star

    The end of Roe is the beginning of new life for citizens and their duties | Acton Institute

    How Meijer's Trump impeachment vote sealed his fate in west Michigan | Detroit News

    Gibbs, Scholten seek to win over supporters of defeated Congressman Peter Meijer | MLive

    Defeated GOP lawmaker sees ‘dark and cynical’ streak prevailing in politics - POLITICO



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    A recession by any other name still stinks Aug 01, 2022

    David L. Bahnsen joins Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman on the show this week to discuss all things economics. Just what is a recession? How do we know? What should we do if we’re actually in one? What is the future of inflation? If inflation comes down, is it a good sign or would it be indicative of different problems in the economy? Are we at risk of investing too much in the power of government and politicians to both break and fix the economy? And are oil companies making record profits?

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    U.S. GDP Fell at 0.9% Annual Rate in Second Quarter; Recession Fears Loom Over Economy | Wall Street Journal

    Fed hikes interest rates by 0.75 percentage point for second consecutive time to fight inflation | CNBC

    The Inflation Reduction Act Won’t Reduce Inflation | Wall Street Journal

    The Dividend Cafe | David L. Bahnsen

    There’s No Free Lunch: 250 Economic Truths | David L. Bahnsen

    Foundations of a Free & Virtuous Society | Dylan Pahman

    Crisis of Responsibility: Our Cultural Addiction to Blame and How You Can Cure It | David L. Bahnsen


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    Political violence and the attack on Lee Zeldin Jul 25, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman discuss the rising concern about political violence in the wake of the attack in New York on Republican gubernatorial candidate Rep. Lee Zeldin. How do we stem this tide, and what role do politicians and rhetoric play in inciting such violence? From there the discussion turns to the elimination of cash bail in New York. Then, given President Biden’s trip to Saudi Arabia, how should we approach dealing with nations that violate human rights and, specific to Saudi Arabia, murder journalists, especially when there are geopolitical security concerns in the region? Finally, two St. Louis Cardinals superstars can’t travel to Canada to play the Blue Jays because they aren’t vaccinated. Do travel restrictions like this make sense anymore?

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    Suspected attacker of GOP Rep. Lee Zeldin arrested on federal assault charge | CNN

    Survey Looks at Acceptance of Political Violence in U.S. | New York Times

    Roberts rebukes Schumer for saying justices will ‘pay the price’ for a vote against abortion rights | Washington Post

    Biden Says He Told Saudi Prince He Blames Him for Khashoggi Murder | New York Times

    Here's what the 'glowing orb' Trump touched in Saudi Arabia actually was | Insider

    ‘The Dissident’

    Dictatorships & Double Standards | Jeane J. Kirkpatrick, Commentary Magazine

    Kansas City Royals, with 10 unvaccinated players absent, beat Toronto Blue Jays | ESPN

    Cardinals’ unvaccinated stars explain decision; Miles Mikolas regrets getting vaccine | The Comeback


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    Bonus episode: Stranger Things 4 Jul 22, 2022

    In a very special bonus episode of Acton Unwind, Eric Kohn is joined by Dylan Pahman and Daniel Baas to discuss the fourth season of the hit Netflix series “Stranger Things.” They explore the show’s depiction of communism, the satanic panic of the 1980s, concepts of good and evil, and tease out some possible religious allegories.


    Supernatural thriller Stranger Things shows the all-too-human evil of communism | Dylan Pahman


    Cronyism vs. free markets in ‘Stranger Things’ | Dylan Pahman


    Stranger Things on America: ‘It’s not rigged!’ | Jordan Ballor


    Stranger Things’ Impressive Run | Bradley Birzer, National Review


    Stranger Things 4 | Eddie Munson's Upside Down Guitar Scene | Netflix


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    How old is too old to be president? Jul 18, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman ponder the nexus of age, experience, and leadership. Is it possible to be too old to have a job with as many high-pressure responsibilities as come with being president of the United States? If so, what is the wisest way to implement an age limitation? Should we just leave it up to voters to decide based on the individual candidates available? Then the guys discuss whether changing our language has the ability to change what it is we’re talking about. Does insisting people use words like “Latinx” have any meaningful impact on concepts of gender? Or does it just annoy a lot of people? Finally, Dylan details the argument made in his and Texas Tech University economics professor Alexander Salter’s recent Wall Street Journal essay on lessons from the Bible on money and inflation.


    Jill Biden’s ‘LatinX IncluXion Luncheon’ FiaXco | Charles Cooke, National Review


    In God—and Sound Money—We Trust | Dylan Pahman & Alexander Salter, Wall Street Journal


    For the Least of These: Against Inflation Economics | Dylan Pahman & Alexander Salter, Public Discourse


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    Shinzo Abe and Boris Johnson fall Jul 11, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman discuss both the shocking assassination of former Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and the political downfall of British Prime Minister Boris Johnson. What is Abe’s legacy and the significance of his assassination in Japanese civic and political culture? And will Boris Johnson even leave a legacy beyond negotiating Brexit? Next, Twitter is looking to sue Elon Musk, who has announced he’s backing out of his deal to purchase the social media platform. Can you force someone to buy something? And finally, the guys break down the end of the Supreme Court’s term, particularly the case of West Virginia v. EPA. How much in American political life could be fixed by Congress just doing its job?

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    Who Shot Shinzo Abe and Why? Everything We Know So Far | Bloomberg

    Shinzo Abe, powerful former Japan PM, leaves divided legacy | Associated Press

    Why was U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson forced to resign, and what happens next? | CBS News

    Nine Tories Vie for Leadership in Contest for Johnson’s Successor | Bloomberg

    Twitter, Elon Musk Set for Unprecedented Legal Battle Over Deal Collapse | Wall Street Journal

    Twitter will be no worse with owner Elon Musk, and probably no better | Eric Kohn, Acton Institute

    West Virginia v. EPA | US Supreme Court


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    Bloody Independence Day Jul 05, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman take stock of the current status of the American founding, 246 years after the colonies declared independence. How effective have the attacks coming from the left and the right on the founding been, if at all? Then they examine the horrific mass shooting at an Independence Day parade in Highland Park, Illinois. If public policy can’t fix broken souls, how can we reach people like this shooter before they perpetrate these violent acts?

    Highland Park shooting sends shockwaves | Axios

    Liberal Practice v. Liberal Theory | Daniel E. Burns, National Affairs


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    All about Dobbs Jun 27, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss everything surrounding the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, which overturned previous precedents in Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey. Why has most of the reaction been about the policy implications flowing from the decision and not what the Supreme Court actually wrote and held in Dobbs? What does that say about civics education in America right now? What should we take away from the concurring opinions filed by Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Clarence Thomas? What, if anything, was the impact of the leak of Justice Samuel Alito’s draft opinion? And how will the decision affect the nascent common-good constitutionalism movement?

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    Opinion of the Court in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization

    The Essential Natural Law | Samuel Gregg

    The future of abortion in America | Acton Unwind

    Samuel Gregg Joins AIER to Lead Initiative Defending Freedom, Combatting Collectivism | AIER


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    Is it ethical to watch Saudi-backed golf? Jun 20, 2022

    On this episode, Eric Kohn, Dylan Pahman, and Dan Hugger discuss the newly launched LIV Golf International Series, a competitor to the PGA Tour that has drawn defections from some big golfing names—Phil Mickelson, Dustin Johnson, and Bryson DeChambeau, to name a few—and controversy for being primarily funded by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. What is the ethical responsibility of the average sports consumer when a sporting event is being funded or supported by a monstrous regime? Then the guys turn their attention to the Federal Reserve, which raised interest rates by 75 basis points in an effort to combat inflation. Will it work? Will it have terrible unintended consequences? Both?

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    What is LIV Golf? The controversial PGA Tour competitor Bryson DeChambeau and Phil Mickelson are joining, explained | The Athletic

    Shark trailer | ESPN 30 for 30

    But What if We're Wrong?: Thinking About the Present as if It Were the Past | Chuck Klosterman

    For the Least of These: Against Inflation Economics | Public Discourse

    Partisan vitriol threatens the economy—and lives (with David Bahnsen) | Acton Unwind


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    Partisan vitriol threatens the economy—and lives Jun 13, 2022

    This week, special guest David Bahnsen joins Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger as they discuss inflation in America hitting a 40-year high. What’s driving the present persistent inflation? How is our present economic malaise different from our last bout of persistent inflation in the 1970s? How does political polarization hamper our ability to respond effectively to economic crises? The second half of the program is dedicated to a review and evaluation of the ongoing work of the January 6 committee, as well as the recent assassination attempt on Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh. What does the emerging tendency toward political violence say about America? How does our present partisan politics fuel this disturbing trend?

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    Higher Unemployment Rate Looms as the Fed Fights Inflation | The Wall Street Journal

    There's No Free Lunch: 250 Economic Truths | David Bahnsen

    In First Jan. 6 Hearing, Graphic Footage and Stark Testimony Show Depth of Attack | The New York Times

    Who Is the Former TV News Chief Helping the Jan. 6 Committee? | The New York Times

    Armed Man Traveled to Justice Kavanaugh’s Home to Kill Him, Officials Say | The New York Times


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    How do we grapple with Uvalde? Jun 06, 2022

    In this episode, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the massacre of 19 children and two adults in Uvalde, Texas. How do we grapple with horrors like this? What can we do, as individuals and as a society, to reduce the likelihood that attacks like this will happen again? Are we lacking the moral language to effectively discuss such events? Then there’s the lack of response on the part of the Uvalde police. While these cops clearly failed the people they were charged with protecting, what role did the failure to properly prepare them to do their job play in this outcome? And finally, the guys examine Ilya Shapiro’s resignation from Georgetown Law School shortly after he was exonerated in regard to his offending tweets about Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson. Will it make any difference in the cause of free speech?

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    Uvalde School Shooting | The Texas Tribune

    What we know, minute by minute, about how the Uvalde shooting and police response unfolded | The Texas Tribune

    Ilya Shapiro Resigns from Georgetown Law School | National Review

    We Got Here Because of Cowardice. We Get Out With Courage | Bari Weiss, Commentary


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    The evangelical crackup May 31, 2022

    In this episode of Acton Unwind, Dan Churchwell, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger focus on the crisis in evangelical Christianity, with factions within the broader evangelical community pitted one against the other. The discussion is framed by Tim Alberta’s recent piece in The Atlantic, “How Politics Poisoned Evangelicalism,” which examines the responses of several evangelical churches in Brighton, Michigan, to the presidency of Donald Trump and the COVID-19 pandemic. Just what is evangelicalism and its relationship to politics? How has evangelicals’ embrace of modern technology both widened their influence and fostered divisions within?

    Also discussed is the upcoming Acton University. What is Acton University, who are some of the featured speakers, and what sorts of people attend? How does Acton University seek to foster dialog among people of diverse faiths to address the crises, both social and economic, of our time?

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    How Politics Poisoned the Evangelical Church | The Atlantic

    The “Bebbington quadrilateral” | Wikipedia

    The Scopes Trial | Wikipedia

    Acton University 2022

    Acton University Online 2022


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    The Orthodox Church and Ukraine May 23, 2022

    In the episode of Acton Unwind, Dylan Pahman, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger focus on the war in Ukraine and its religious context. What battles over ecclesiastic authority are involved? What is the Russian Orthodox Church saying about the conflict? The discussion then turns to the economic effects of the war upon the rest of the world, with particular focus on food production and distribution. Why are some countries affected more severely than others? Also among the discussion is a focus on China and its COVID lockdowns and growing economic problems. How is China moving away from its limited economic liberalization of the past? What does this mean for America’s future relationship with China? Lastly, Nancy Pelosi has been recently barred from receiving holy communion by the Archbishop of San Francisco. What makes the Pelosi case different from instances of Roman Catholic politicians in conflict received Church teaching on abortion? What does this case say about how many Americans view the relationship between church and state?

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    Everyday Saints and Other Stories Paperback – Archimandrite Tikhon

    The Promise of Confucian Liberty – Law & Liberty

    What the West Got Wrong About China – Law & Liberty

    Full text of Archbishop Cordileone letter to Nancy Pelosi banning her from Communion – Catholic News Agency

    Speaker Pelosi on Meet the Press transcript 2008 – NBC


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    The arrest of Cardinal Zen May 16, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the arrest of Cardinal Joseph Zen in Hong Kong on charges of violating the National Security Law and allegedly "colluding with foreign forces.” The arrest of Zen and three others comes in the wake of the arrest of other pro-democracy and human rights activists like Jimmy Lai, the subject of Acton’s most recent documentary feature film, THE HONG KONGER: JIMMY LAI’S EXTRAORDINARY STRUGGLE FOR FREEDOM. What does this arrest tell us about the state of Hong Kong? And how has the Holy See responded to this incident? Then the guys break down the latest inflation numbers and the proposed “anti-price gouging” legislation and other supposed “solutions” to inflation that have nothing to do with inflation or that would simply make matters worse.

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    Hong Kong cardinal Joseph Zen arrested under China's security law | BBC

    The Hong Konger: Jimmy Lai’s Extraordinary Struggle for Freedom

    The Hong Konger movie trailer

    Inflation Is Tanking the Stock Market | The Dispatch

    Will-to-Power Conservatism and the Great Liberalism Schism | Stephanie Slade, Reason


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    The future of abortion in America May 09, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dylan Pahman, and Dan Hugger tackle the issue that’s on everyone’s mind: the leak of the Supreme Court draft option in the Dobbs case overturning both Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey. How monumental is the leak itself, and how does it threaten the institution of the Court? What does the draft opinion from Justice Samuel Alito actually do? What do the American people actually think about abortion? What happens now? And finally, assuming the Court overturns Roe and Casey in the Dobbs decision, how will the period of time between Roe and Dobbs be remembered?

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    Apply now for Acton University 2022

    How overturning Roe v. Wade can reset the civil order | Acton Unwind

    Supreme Court has voted to overturn abortion rights, draft opinion shows | Politico

    Are children their parents’ property? | Dylan Pahman, Acton Institute

    How Americans Understand Abortion: A Comprehensive Interview Study of Abortion Attitudes in the U.S. | University of Notre Dame


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    Why are we uncomfortable with religion in the public square? May 02, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the case that was argued before the Supreme Court last week about whether Joseph Kennedy, a former football coach in Washington State, could pray with others at the 50-yard line after public school football games. Kennedy looks likely to win his case, but should he? Why do we have such a hard time grappling with the role of religion in public life? Will this case do anything to help that problem? Next, we already have inflation. Now we have negative GDP growth. Are the 1970s back in full force? Would a recession be the worst thing that could happen right now if we need to head off inflation? And if inflation is still a problem, why are we even talking about “canceling” $1.75 trillion in student loan debt? Finally, the Department of Homeland Security’s new Disinformation Governance Board—Orwellian nightmare or total joke?

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    Coach’s Prayers Prompt Supreme Court Test of Religious Freedom | The New York Times

    Kennedy v. Bremerton School District | SCOTUSblog

    Supreme Court Hears Football Coach Prayer Case | Advisory Opinions podcast

    US economy unexpectedly shrinks 1.4% in first quarter of 2022: Is a recession looming? | Fox Business

    Biden considering student-loan forgiveness of at least $10,000 per borrower through executive action: report | Business Insider

    Are You Ready for the DHS ‘Disinformation Governance Board’? | National Review


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    Fall of the House of Mouse in Florida? Apr 25, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger give quick takes on two developing stories previously discussed on this program: the French presidential election, in which the incumbent, Emmanuel Macron, has emerged victorious over Marine Le Pen; and Twitter’s reported acceptance of Elon Musk’s purchase offer. Then they turn their attention to Florida and the recently passed legislation to strip Disney of its Reedy Creek Improvement District carveout in retaliation for Disney’s objection to the Parental Rights in Education bill. How much can the political ideas of Nazi legal theorist Carl Schmitt explain what’s happening in Florida right now? Finally, after a Florida judge ruled against the transportation mask mandate, acceptance of the endemic nature of COVID-19 in the U.S. became pretty much a given. China, however, is still invested in their COVID-Zero policy by completely locking down the port city of Shanghai. What does that portend for other cities in China?


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    French election result: Macron defeats Le Pen and vows to unite divided France | BBC

    Twitter set to accept Musk’s $43 billion offer | Reuters

    Disney government dissolution bill signed by DeSantis | Associated Press

    End of Reedy Creek: Disney won’t pay more taxes, but you will | WFTV

    The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits | Milton Friedman, The New York Times

    A Man for All Seasons: “Give the Devil Benefit of Law”

    What I Saw at the National Conservatism Conference | Dan Hugger, Religion & Liberty

    What’s Wrong and What’s Right about Judge Mizelle’s Mask-Mandate Decision | Andrew C. McCarthy, National Review

    Beijing COVID outbreak prompts fear of Shanghai-style lockdown | ABC News


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    Blunt reaction to Elon Musk’s Twitter takeover Apr 18, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Dylan Pahman, and Dan Hugger update the Elon Musk twitter drama. How serious should we take Musk’s attempt to purchase Twitter? And even if he did, how much would it impact people who aren’t just very, very online. How much has this episode revealed about the people who are either outraged or delighted by the story? Then the guys dive into the most recent Atlantic essay from social psychologist Jonathan Haidt, “Why the past 10 years of American life have been uniquely stupid.”

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    Elon Musk offers to buy Twitter for $43 billion, so it can be ‘transformed as private company’ | CNBC

    The 4 Most Unhinged Responses to Elon Musk’s Offer to Buy Twitter | Based Politics

    Journalism Professor Roasted for Comparing Elon Musk’s Twitter Takeover With the Rise of Hitler in Nazi Germany | Mediaite

    Why the past 10 years of American life have been uniquely stupid | Jonathan Haidt, The Atlantic


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    The populist right rises (in France) Apr 11, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn and Sam Gregg pilot this two-person ship through four topics. First, they tackle the first round of French presidential elections, where the incumbent Emmanuel Macron will face off in a rematch with Marine Le Pen. What does the rise of Le Pen’s right-wing populism mean for France, and why have the two major political parties lost support so dramatically? Next, Elon Musk is now the largest shareholder in Twitter, prompting a mini-freakout in the Big Tech world. Are Musk’s actions a clear example of the way the market can deal with Big Tech issues better than the heavy hand of government? And why is Musk so hated among the left for finding more effective and fun ways to address their concerns, like climate change and space travel? Next, Eric and Sam take on the continued call to cancel all student-loan debt. Who would really benefit if this happened? (It’s probably not the people you think.) And finally, the right’s fashionable new epithet to hurl at opponents is “groomer.” Maybe it’s not OK to cheapen pedophilia…


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    Macron to Face Le Pen for President as French Gravitate Toward Extremes | New York Times


    In major reversal, Elon Musk is not joining Twitter board | TechCrunch


    Psaki: Student loan borrowers likely to have to pay debt ‘sometime’ | Politico


    Biden to delay student loan repayment, again extending pause, as Dems push for forgiveness | USA Today


    Student Loan Debt Statistics: 2022 | NerdWallet


    The ‘Groomer’ Accusation Is Counterproductive | David Harsanyi


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    "Boys" and "Girls" banned from Disney World Apr 04, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger take on Florida’s HB 1557, christened by the media as the “Don’t Say Gay” bill. While it doesn’t say, “Don’t say gay,” it does say several things worth discussing. And how much of a backlash could Disney be in for now that their internal conversations about adding “queerness” to its programming are public. Next, the guys consider President Joe Biden’s pledge to release 1 million barrels of oil per day from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Is this anything but political posturing? And finally, Ezra Klein of The New York Times had an extraordinary interview with economist Larry Summers during which Klein’s feelings ran headlong into reality. We can help him connect his good intentions to sound economics.

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    HB 1557: Parental Rights in Education bill text

    Breaking Down the So-Called ‘Don’t Say Gay’ Bill | The Dispatch

    Disney Executive Producer Admits to ‘Gay Agenda,’ ‘Adding Queerness’ Wherever She Could | Caroline Downey, National Review

    What I Saw at the National Conservatism Conference | Dan Hugger, Religion & Liberty

    Biden orders 'unprecedented' release of oil reserves | BBC

    Transcript: Ezra Klein Interviews Larry Summers | The New York Times

    Modern Economics Is Not an Illuminati Conspiracy | Stan Veuger, American Compass


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    “Best Assault at the Oscars” Goes To… Mar 28, 2022

    It’s a two-man show this week as Eric Kohn and Dan Hugger begin by discussing the slap heard ’round the entertainment world. In the event you haven’t heard yet, actor Will Smith stormed the Oscars stage last night to slap Chris Rock after Rock made a joke about Smith’s wife, Jada Pinkett Smith. Was it staged? Was it real? Can we know? Does it matter? Speaking of blurring the lines of reality and fantasy, next Eric and Dan examine the stolen Jan. 6 text messages from Ginni Thomas, wife of Supreme Court justice Clarence Thomas. How much of politics now is just playacting of the kind we see in Hollywood? Finally, what is a woman? Perhaps Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson can’t define one, but Dan and Eric can.

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    Will Smith slaps Chris Rock (Warning: NSFW language)

    Sorry, but Chris Rock Had It Coming | Rod Dreher, The American Conservative

    Texts Show Ginni Thomas’s Embrace of Conspiracy Theories | The New York Times

    Justice Scalia Won | Dan McLaughlin, National Review


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    Lia Thomas and the nature of the human person Mar 21, 2022

    Today, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the controversy surrounding Lia Thomas, the transgender swimmer on the women’s swim team at the University of Pennsylvania, who just recently took home the NCAA Division I national championship in the women's 500-yard freestyle. What questions does this raise about the nature of the human person, and to what extent has that anthropological question gone unexamined and ignored by the people and institutions surrounding this story? Then the gang examines Pope Francis’ comments from last week that “wars are always unjust.” What is the church’s just war theory, and what did the pope mean by his comments? And finally, the guys answer the first listener question with some book recommendations to acquaint you with how they see the world.

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    Watching Lia Thomas Win | Common Sense

    ‘I Am Lia’: The Trans Swimmer Dividing America Tells Her Story | Sports Illustrated

    ‘Just war’ no more? What did Pope Francis say, and what does it mean? | The Pillar


    Listener-question book recommendations:


    Sam:

    Treatise on Law | St. Thomas Aquinas

    Natural Law and Natural Rights | John Finnis

    The Wealth of Nations | Adam Smith


    Dan:

    Centesimus Annus (1 May 1991) | John Paul II

    The Humane Economist: A Wilhelm Röpke Reader | Wilhelm Röpke (Author), Daniel J. Hugger (Editor)

    Lord Acton: Historical and Moral Essays | Lord Acton (Author), Daniel J. Hugger (Author)


    Eric:

    The Law | Frédéric Bastiat

    The Quest for Community: A Study in the Ethics of Order and Freedom | Robert Nisbit

    The Theory of Moral Sentiments & The Wealth of Nations | Adam Smith


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    The ballooning problem of inflation Mar 14, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Stephen Barrows discuss the latest spike in inflation, hitting 7.9% over last year. That’s the worst it’s been since 1982. What action will the Federal Reserve take? Has the Federal Reserve simply failed? If so, what’s the lesson we should learn? Then the guys discuss the sanctions regime that’s been put on Russia. Are sanctions effective? Are they moral? Are they working? And finally, would you fight for your country if it was invaded? In a new poll, an alarming number of Americans say no. What should be the takeaway from that?

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    US inflation soared 7.9% in past year, a fresh 40-year high | Associated Press

    Average US gas price rises 22% in two weeks to record $4.43 | Associated Press

    What sanctions are being imposed on Russia over Ukraine invasion? | BBC

    The Great Demographic Reversal: Ageing Societies, Waning Inequality, and an Inflation Revival | Charles Goodhart and Manoj Pradhan

    Yes, If America Is Ever Invaded, You Must Take Up Arms and Fight | National Review

    Vast Majority of Americans Say Ban Russian Oil, Quinnipiac University National Poll Finds; Nearly 8 in 10 Support U.S. Military Response if Putin Attacks a NATO Country | Quinnipiac University


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    The church’s response to Ukraine and Russia Mar 07, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dylan Pahman discuss the latest on Ukraine and Russia. Should we be surprised by the unanimity of the European response? To what extent did Vladimir Putin underestimate the strength of Western institutions and alliances? Then they discuss how both the Orthodox Church and the Vatican have responded to the crisis. Finally, they close with brief reactions to President Joe Biden’s State of the Union address.

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    The Morning Dispatch: Putin Cracks Down at Home | The Dispatch

    The Orthodox Response to Putin’s Invasion | Commonweal

    Remarks of President Joe Biden – State of the Union Address as Prepared for Delivery | The White House


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    The post–Cold War world order ends Feb 28, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the Russian invasion of Ukraine. How will this change the rules-based, post–World War II world order? How did the West misread Vladimir Putin? How did Putin misread how the invasion would go? How surprising is the story of actor/comedian-turned-stateman Volodymyr Zelensky? And how much has this international crisis revealed about the corruption of the American political right? Then the guys turn their attention to the upcoming State of the Union address that President Joe Biden will deliver on March 1. What actually is the state of the union?

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    The End of History and the Last Man | Francis Fukuyama

    The Other Mr. President | This American Life

    The Clash of Civilizations? | Samuel P. Huntington

    The Internet of Beefs | Venkatesh Rao

    Justin Trudeau’s political overreach is a greater threat to liberty than the truckers’ protest | Samuel Gregg


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    Parents’ public school revolt comes to San Francisco Feb 21, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the end of the Canadian trucker convoy as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau invokes the Emergencies Act—the precursor of which was last used to respond to domestic terrorism—to clear the convoy from the capital. Boy, that escalated quickly. What will be the lasting effects of this protest, not to mention the way it ended? And how chilling are the threats to freeze bank accounts of protesters and supporters, even as donation data is leaked from the crowdfunding site that hosted a fundraiser for the convoy? Next, the Acton gang examines the recall of three members of the San Francisco school board by overwhelming margins. If a parent uprising against out-of-control public school systems can happen in San Francisco, can it happen anywhere? And finally, the guys remember the late, great writer and humorist P.J. O’Rourke, who passed away last week at the age of 74.

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    Business Matters 2022 — 50% off registration with promo code PODCASTBM22

    Canada invokes unprecedented emergency measures — and triggers a political firestorm | Politico

    Trudeau vows to freeze anti-mandate protesters' bank accounts | BBC

    Names of Canada truck convoy donors leaked after reported hack | Reuters

    San Francisco Unified School District recall, California | Ballotpedia

    P. J. O'Rourke, 1947-2022 | Matt Labash

    P.J. O’Rourke was America’s greatest satirist and coolest conservative | John Podhoretz

    Why we need more O’Rourke Conservatives | Anthony Sacramone

    P.J. O’Rourke speaks at Acton’s 2013 Anniversary Dinner | Acton Vault


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    Truckin’ and Blockade’n Feb 14, 2022

    This week Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger are truckin’ to the Canadian truckers’ blockade of Ottawa and the Ambassador Bridge between Detroit and Windsor. Even if the truckers’ cause is just, are their tactics justifiable? And does it mean now that famously polite and compliant Canada has a populist uprising on its hands over overreaching COVID policy? Then they dissect The New York Times op-ed from three post-liberal conservatives on foreign policy hawkishness. Is the hesitancy to get into foreign entanglements all that novel an argument, or is it concealing something far more radical than mere retrenchment? And finally, the guys discuss Dan’s Detroit News op-ed on Joe Rogan and the problem of misinformation in the media.

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    Canada Opens Blockaded Bridge, but in Ottawa, Truckers Won’t Budge | New York Times

    Hawks Are Standing in the Way of a New Republican Party | Sohrab Ahmari, Patrick Deneen, and Gladden Pappin, New York Times

    Public Choice Theory and the Illusion of Grand Strategy: How Generals, Weapons Manufacturers, and Foreign Governments Shape American Foreign Policy | Richard Hanania

    Joe Rogan is not a problem, but a mirror | Dan Hugger, Acton Institute


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    The Georgetown Law crying game Feb 07, 2022

    National Review ISI fellow Nate Hochman joins Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger this week to discuss his recent reporting on the Ilya Shapiro controversy at Georgetown Law School. The student sit-in in the wake of Shapiro’s poorly worded tweets produced demands for cry rooms and reparations. Will they get what they want? Why do people in places of authority seem incapable of standing up to these outrage mobs? Then the group discusses the surprisingly good jobs report for January, where the economy added nearly 500,000 jobs—and all during the Omicron wave. If this is more evidence that the public is moving on from the pandemic, why do so many political leaders refuse to take the off-ramps they’re being offered and instead stand by mask mandates and other mitigation measures? And finally, should we have boycotted the Beijing Winter Olympics?


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    Business Matters 2022 — 50% off registration with promo code PODCASTBM22


    Acton Institute announces $300,000 Beijing Olympics broadcast ad campaign advocating for the release of Hong Kong democracy activist Jimmy Lai


    "The Hong Konger” 30-second Olympics ad


    The Hong Konger: Jimmy Lai’s Extraordinary Struggle for Freedom


    Georgetown Law Students Stage Sit-In, Demand Dean Fire Ilya Shapiro | Nate Hochman, National Review


    Ilya Shapiro Tweets about Biden Supreme Court Nominee | FIRE


    How Michigan’s Ballooning DEI Bureaucracy Stifled Speech and Divided the Campus | National Review


    Companies unexpectedly cut 301,000 jobs in January as omicron slams labor market, ADP says | CNBC


    Payrolls show surprisingly powerful gain of 467,000 in January despite omicron surge | CNBC


    What message does NBC’s Olympics coverage send? | Isaac Willour, Acton Institute


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    Stephen Breyer, inconsequential consequentialist justice Jan 31, 2022

    This week Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the retirement of Stephen Breyer from the Supreme Court. Will he have an enduring legacy, or will he be largely forgotten? How should we evaluate his jurisprudence? He is often thought of as a moderate liberal but was frequently deferential to state power. Can we expect any fireworks from the confirmation hearing of his successor, or will it be a far duller affair compared to those of Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett? Then the Acton gang discuss what action the Federal Reserve is likely to take to combat inflation. How much of a shock to the economic system would an increase in interest rates be, and what’s the likely political fallout? Finally, they consider Eric’s recent Detroit News op-ed, arguing for COVID-19 risk assessment and decision making to be made on a personal and family level. How long can “COVID Zero” approaches endure? And how much longer will we continue masking kids in schools?

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    Justice Stephen Breyer to retire from Supreme Court, paving way for Biden appointment | NBC News

    Justice Breyer’s Retirement May Not Be All Bad News for Conservatives | National Review

    Fed likely to hike rates in March as Powell vows sustained inflation fight | Reuters

    Fed seen as hiking interest rates seven times in 2022, or once at every meeting, BofA says | MarketWatch

    It’s time individuals, not the government, make choices about COVID-19 risk | Eric Kohn, Acton Institute

    Maryland county school CEO suggests students will be required to wear masks until 'COVID no longer exists’ | Fox News



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    Help desperately needed for American employers, American Jews, and Joe Biden's rhetoric Jan 17, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Stephen Barrows discuss the “the big quit,” as more than 20 million Americans quit their jobs in the second half of 2021. With more than 10.5 million job openings right now, what does this pandemic-induced change in the labor market mean for workers and employers going forward? Next, they look at President Joe Biden’s speech in Atlanta, Ga., on voting rights, comparing anyone not in agreement with him to being on the side of George Wallace, Bull Connor, and Jefferson Davis. So much for turning down the temperature on political rhetoric. Finally, they examine the incident at Congregation Beth Israel synagogue in Colleyville, Texas. Why is it so hard for some to identify anti-Semitism as anti-Semitism?

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    The Great Resignation: Why more Americans are quitting their jobs than ever before | 60 Minutes

    Remarks by President Biden on Protecting the Right to Vote | The White House

    About That Speech … | The Dispatch

    Jewish leaders react to FBI statement on Texas synagogue hostage-taker: 'The FBI got it wrong’ | Fox News

    Why do some people hate the Jews? | Acton Line


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    Manhattan DA’s light-on-crime approach is a threat to meaningful criminal justice reform Jan 10, 2022

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger briefly discuss the first anniversary of the January 6 capitol riot. Have we learned anything helpful in the past year? Then they examine the waves being caused by teachers unions once again forcing public schools to close in major cities. Is this enough to stir a parent revolt to change the nature of public education as we know it? Next, they take a look at the newly announced policies of the Manhattan district attorney that would effectively eliminate jail time for an array of serious offenses. What damage will this light-on-crime approach do to meaningful and serious criminal justice reform? And finally, they review the conviction of Theranos founder Elizabeth Holmes on four federal counts of defrauding investors. What, if anything, does this have to say about market capitalism or Silicon Valley?

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    The Chicago Teachers Union’s Priorities | Wall Street Journal

    Manhattan DA to stop seeking prison sentences in slew of criminal cases | New York Post

    Justice Reformers Need to Update Their Priors | The Atlantic

    Elizabeth Holmes is the con artist we were all waiting for | Acton Institute

    The Dropout Podcast | ABC News


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    Omi-chronic COVID panic Dec 20, 2021

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the progress of the House Select Committee on the events of January 6. Has everyone already formed their conclusions about what happened? Is there anything that could be revealed that would change anyone’s mind? Is there any civic good that could come from this? The Omicron variant appears to be more transmissible but less deadly. That’s a good development. So why is it prompting renewed talk of school shutdowns, greater lockdowns, and mask mandates that extend forever? Are we perpetually searching for a technocratic solution to a problem that has no actual solution? And finally, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has proposed the Stop the Wrongs to Our Kids and Employees (W.O.K.E.) Act to extricate wokeness from schools and businesses. Is this a problem that we can legislate away?

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    The Fifth Column Podcast with Rep. Peter Meijer (R-Mich.)

    Fox News hosts urged Meadows to have Trump stop Jan. 6 violence, texts show | Washington Post

    Remarks by President Biden After Meeting with Members of the COVID-⁠19 Response Team | White House

    Fauci says masks on planes will always be necessary no matter what: 'Go that extra step’ | Fox Business

    Schools, classrooms close doors again in latest Covid surge | NBC News

    Governor DeSantis Announces Legislative Proposal to Stop W.O.K.E. Activism and Critical Race Theory in Schools and Corporations | State of Florida

    D.C. third-graders were made to reenact episodes from the Holocaust | Washington Post


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    Not-so transitory inflation and crisis time for global Catholicism Dec 13, 2021

    This week, Samuel Gregg, Stephen Barrows, and Michael Matheson Miller discuss two topics. The first is the ongoing rise of inflation in the United States. Whatever happened to “transitory inflation”? Who benefits and who doesn’t from inflation? What needs to be done to bring inflation under control? Then this week’s all-Catholic team weighs in on a broader topic: the state of the Catholic Church around the world today. Much of the Church seems to be in disarray, whether it’s the resignations of bishops, the state of the Church in Germany, the Synod on Synodality, disputes about Holy Communion and liturgy, or the Vatican’s deal with the Communist regime in Beijing. We discuss some of the underlying causes, but also where we can find signs of hope.

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    How do you feel about inflation? The answer will help determine its longevity | Wall St Journal

    El-Erian says ‘transitory’ was the ‘worst inflation call in the history’ of the Fed | CNBC

    Inflation: Prices on the Rise | IMF

    Inflation surged 6.8% in November, even more than expected, to fastest rate since 1982 | CNBC

    Ratzinger’s Cross | Public Discourse

    The Vatican Would Profit from the Views of This Jesuit | Alejandro Chafuen, Forbes

    After Two Decades, Abuse Crisis Has Humbled the Catholic Church | The Wall Street Journal

    China’s Catholic Leviathan: Jesuits and the Sino-Vatican Agreement | Catholic World Report


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    How overturning Roe v. Wade can reset the civil order Dec 06, 2021

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the implications of Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, the case involving Mississippi’s ban on abortion after 15 weeks, which was argued before the Supreme Court on Dec. 1. How much has the legal regime created by Roe and Casey distorted our civic and political life? And what would be likely to happen if the Supreme Court did overturn the Roe and Casey decisions in their Dobbs ruling? Would it be as incendiary as some people seem to assume? Then the guys discuss the primary theme of Blake Masters’ campaign for Senate: “In America, you should be able to raise a family on one single income.” Is it true that people can’t do that right now? Do the proponents of this vision ignore the costs associated with it? And are GDP growth and family formation really at odds?


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    Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization | SCOTUSblog

    Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Oral Arguments

    Exit poll results from the 2021 election for Virginia governor | Washington Post

    The Blake Masters Vision | National Review

    Why Parents Staying Home to Raise Their Kids Is a Good Thing | National Review


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    Omicron, here we go again Nov 29, 2021

    This week, Eric Kohn, Stephen Barrows, and Dan Hugger discuss the emergence of the new Omicron variant of COVID-19. With so little known about it, are political leaders and public health officials getting too far ahead of themselves? Dr. Anthony Fauci says he “represent[s] science.” When did we come to have such a malformed understanding of the scientific process that we moved into an ideological understanding of science? And how unsurprised should we be that the World Health Organization skipped over the “Xi” variant name? Finally, they discuss Yuval Levin's recent essay "The changing face of social breakdown.” What's holding people back from starting their lives? Has the pandemic made these problems worse or just revealed trends already at work? And how can we learn to better deal with our changing world to establish more communion, not just communication?

    Subscribe to Acton Unwind, Acton Line & Acton Vault

    Omicron Rises, but Our Fears Should Not | National Review

    Fauci: Republican detractors are "criticizing science” | Axios

    In Naming Omicron Variant, Authorities Skipped ‘Xi’ and ‘Nu’ | Wall Street Journal

    A ‘Simpsons’ Episode Lampooned Chinese Censorship. In Hong Kong, It Vanished. | New York Times

    The changing face of social breakdown | The Dispatch

    For first time, India’s fertility rate below replacement level | Times of India

    Light on the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali | B. K. S. Iyengar

    National Economic Planning: What Is Left?| Don Lavoie

    The Use of Knowledge in Society | Friedrich A. Hayek


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    Thinking clearly in a time of ideology Nov 22, 2021

    Today on Acton Unwind, Stephen Barrows, Dan Hugger, and Dylan Pahman join Michael Matheson Miller—guest editor of the new double issue of Religion & Liberty, Acton’s quarterly journal of religion, economics, and culture—to discuss the issue’s theme: the challenges of thinking clearly in an age dominated by ideology. How can we function in a time when the pursuit of truth, and even the meaning of “truth” itself, is subservient to a suffocating ideology that makes real dialogue between opposing viewpoints difficult if not impossible? What are the risks that come with the adoption of a rigid ideology? What is the difference between ideology and worldview? And how do we resist the temptation of adopting ideological thinking ourselves?

    Religion & liberty Summer/Fall 2021

    Carter Snead at the Acton Lecture Series: What it means to be human

    The History of Freedom in Antiquity

    Bastiat’s Theory of Class: The Plunderers vs. the Plundered

    Biblical Worldview Crucial for the New Millennium

    Subscribe to Acton Unwind, Acton Line & Acton Vault


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


    Whip inflation now, again Nov 15, 2021

    Today Eric Kohn, Stephen Barrows, and Dan Hugger discuss all things inflation. What makes the inflation we’re seeing now different from the experience of the 1970s? What does it mean that we have a contracting labor force along with high inflation? How long will inflation be with us, and is there anything that can be done about it? The discussion then turns to mission creep and masking guidance from the CDC, with the agency head suggesting we keep wearing masks to combat, not only COVID-19, but the flu and the common cold as well. And finally, the trials of Kyle Rittenhouse and the accused killers of Ahmaud Arbery are both underway, but only the Rittenhouse proceeding is getting much attention, thanks largely to people using it as a political cudgel. What would happen if we lost faith in our legal system the way we’ve lost faith in so many other American institutions?

    Fastest Inflation in 31 Years Puts More Heat on Washington | New York Times

    The number of U.S. workers quitting their jobs in September was the highest on record | New York Times

    Labor force participation is static, a conundrum for the Fed | New York Times

    Inflation Will Make or Break the Next Spending Bill | New York Times

    The CDC's Director Implies That Face Masks Are More Effective Than Vaccines at Preventing COVID-19 Infection | Reason

    The Rittenhouse Trial Is a Master Class in Media Bias | National Review

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    Is national conservatism the future of the right? Nov 08, 2021

    This week, Eric Kohn, Michael Matheson Miller, and Dan Hugger discuss the National Conservatism convention, from which Dan just recently returned. What do the national conservatives want? Should we think about this as an intellectual movement or as a political movement? Have they achieved a consensus about their own identity? And how much of a force will they prove to be within conservative intellectual circles and conservative politics going forward?


    National Conservatism Convention agenda


    The biggest problems of national conservatism | Acton Line


    A healthy conservative nationalism? Not without classical liberalism | Joseph Sunde, Acton Institute


    Subscribe to Acton Unwind, Acton Line & Acton Vault


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


    Is a parent-driven revolution brewing in public education? Nov 01, 2021

    In this episode, Eric, Sam, and Dylan discuss the potential for upheavals in public education. Will fights over the curriculum and the cumulative impact of the COVID-19 pandemic (and the behavior of the teachers union during it) open up the possibility of wholesale changes in public schools? Next, Joe Biden’s meeting with Pope Francis goes very, very well. At least according to Joe Biden. Is the president to be believed when he says Pope Francis assured him he's a Catholic in good standing? Is this something he should even be saying out loud? Finally, Eric and Dylan discuss Dune and explore the important themes related to human nature at play in Frank Herbert’s book and Denis Villeneuve’s film--and in all good science fiction.


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    Virginia governor's race now hinges on education, and one candidate has a clear edge: poll | Fox News


    Critiquing the 1619 Project with Phil Magness | Acton Line


    Capitalism in the 1619 Project | Heritage Foundation, Samuel Gregg


    Biden: Pope told me that I should ‘keep receiving Communion’ | Associated Press


    Discovering human dignity in Villeneuve’s Dune | Dylan Pahman


    Dune trailer


    Acton’s 31st Annual Dinner


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    The growing threat from China Oct 25, 2021

    This week, Eric and Sam discuss the growing threat from China. First, Sam recaps a talk he gave in Houston last week entitled, "China: Enigma and Challenge for the World." In the wake of China’s test of a hypersonic missile that could carry a nuclear warhead, how should we think about the military, economic, and cultural threat that China poses to the United States and to the world?


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    China tests new space capability with hypersonic missile | Financial Times


    Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jen Psaki, October 18, 2021 | White House


    China has won AI battle with U.S., Pentagon's ex-software chief says | Reuters


    What to Do About China? | Sam Gregg, Law & Liberty


    Decline Is a Choice | Charles Krauthammer, Manhattan Institute


    Acton’s 31st Annual Dinner


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    Netflix stands up to the woke mob over Dave Chappelle Oct 18, 2021

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss Netflix standing up to the woke mob coming after Dave Chappelle for his new comedy special, The Closer, in which he makes jokes about the trans-rights movement. Can we view this as a watershed moment in the culture wars? Or is Netflix just defending their $60 million investment in the legendary comedian? Then, the supply chain has problems. Between that, high energy prices, employment problems, and inflation, are we staring down the barrel of a repeat of the 1970s? Next, Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has been out for two months on paternity leave. Setting aside the political-football aspect, how should we think about paternity leave in the modern culture and economy? And finally, we end with a new segment called Recommendable, where the crew will recommend articles, books, podcasts, or anything else they found important and recommendable throughout the week.

    Subscribe to Acton Unwind, Acton Line & Acton Vault

    Defending Dave Chappelle | National Review

    Jews in Space | History of the World Part 1, Mel Brooks

    Jon Gruden emails, explained: Raiders coach resigns following release of damning messages | Sporting News

    Pete Buttigieg defends being on paternity leave amid supply-chain crisis | New York Post

    Fight of the Century: Keynes vs. Hayek | EconStories

    Recommendable:

    Eric - We Got Here Because of Cowardice. We Get Out With Courage | Bari Weiss, Commentary

    Sam - Abusing the Power of the Purse, with Philip Hamburger | Law & Liberty

    Dan -India Before Modi: How the BJP Came to Power | Vinay Sitapati

    Acton’s 31st Annual Dinner


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


    The revolt against COVID-19 vaccine mandates Oct 11, 2021

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dylan Pahman discuss the possibility that objection to Southwest Airlines’ COVID-19 vaccine mandate was behind the cancelation of more than 1,000 flights over the weekend. Even if it wasn’t, there is clearly resistance to vaccine mandates out there, whether coming from the government or private businesses. And why is resistance to mandates, for some people at least, turning into resistance or rejection of the vaccine itself? A University of Michigan professor is under fire for showing his class Lawrence Oliver's black-face film portrayal of Othello. Is the biggest culprit in situations like these the people in authority who cave to the mob? And finally, Sam Gregg discusses his review of Vivek Ramaswamy’s new book Woke, Inc. and how the behavior we're seeing in big corporations is similar to that on display in the University of Michigan story.


    Southwest cancels more than a thousand flights, cites air-traffic control issues | Fox Business


    Southwest Airlines denies that pilot "sick out" drove weekend of delays | Axios


    Michigan Students Accuse Celebrated Music Professor of Racism for Screening Othello | Robby Soave, Reason


    The Revolt of the Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium | Martin Gurri


    Why I Am Suing UCLA | Gordon Klein, Common Sense with Bari Weiss


    The Distorted Market for Woke Capitalism | Sam Gregg, Law & Liberty


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    J.D. Vance wants to seize the wealth to own the libs Oct 04, 2021

    On this week’s episode, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Michael Matheson Miller discuss U.S. Senate candidate J.D. Vance’s comments about the Ford Foundation--namely, that we should “seize the assets of the Ford Foundation, tax their assets, and give it to the people who've had their lives destroyed by their radical open borders agenda.” When did it become acceptable for the right to abandon concepts like constitutionality and the rule of law? Why is this kind of rhetoric constantly escalating? Is it really what the polity wants? Then, have we thrown open the Overton window on spending with the trillion-dollar infrastructure deal? When Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., who is still cool with spending $1.5 trillion on a reconciliation bill on top of the $1 trillion infrastructure bill, is the “conservative” in the conversation, have words lost their meaning entirely? And how long before we’re talking about quadrillion-dollar spending bills?

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    J.D. Vance's latest Fox News stunt is a far-left fantasy | Noah Rothman, MSNBC

    Ford Foundation’s aim to ‘change philanthropy’ warps the true meaning of ‘justice’ and ‘generosity’ | Dan Hugger, Acton Institute

    The Conservatives Dreading—And Preparing for—Civil War | Emma Green, The Atlantic

    A Whiff of Civil War in the Air | David French, The Dispatch

    Terry McAuliffe’s War on Parents | National Review

    Attack Ads, Circa 1800 | Reason

    Manchin proposed $1.5T top-line number to Schumer this summer | Politico

    Related:

    Digital Contagion: 10 Steps to Protect your Family & Business from Intrusion, Cancel Culture, and Surveillance Capitalism | Michael Matheson Miller


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    What obligations do we have to refugees? Sep 27, 2021

    On this week’s episode, Eric Kohn, Dan Churchwell, and Dan Hugger discuss America’s dueling refugee crises: one on the southern border manifesting in around 14,000 migrants descending on Del Rio, Texas, and the refugees fleeing the Taliban rule in Afghanistan following the American exit from that country. How should we approach these problems as Americans, and as Christians? Crime has been rising in American cities. How should we understand the problem, and how important is it to truly understand the nature of the problem and how it’s different in different places before we attempt to pick and choose policies to solve the problem? And finally, Brookings senior fellow and Washington Post columnist Robert Kagan says our constitutional crisis is already here. When they’re subject both to erosion and attack, how long can our American institutions hold up?


    Welcoming the stranger: The dignity and promise of Afghan refugees | Joseph Sunde


    National Review Special Issue in Crime: Law and Disorder


    The Mistakes We Cannot Make Again | David French


    Our constitutional crisis is already here | Robert Kagan


    Trump's 'Eastman Memo' Proposed an Unconstitutional Power Grab by the Vice President | Damon Root


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


    What the Met Gala says about the state of our elites Sep 20, 2021

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss what Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortes’ Met Gala tax-the-rich dress stunt says about the current state of our elites and of elite culture. Are our elites so frivolous because we’ve become frivolous? Or is it the other way around? And why are we so preoccupied with identifying hypocrisy rather than observing and highlighting the underlying implications of that hypocrisy, and the tributes that vice are paying to virtue when we find them? Then, they discuss the email sent to observant Jews at Barnard College in New York City, in effect demanding that they violate their Shabbat obligations to utilize technology for Covid-19 symptoms and to participate in contact tracing. Why is religious freedom so often an afterthought?

    Subscribe to Acton Unwind, Acton Line & Acton Vault

    A lady and her dress, &c. | Jay Nordlinger, National Review

    Barnard College Bureaucrat Apologizes After Using COVID-19 Protocols To Target Jewish Students | Daniella Greenbaum Davis, The Federalist

    Norm MacDonald on Bill Cosby

    How 'elite overproduction' and 'lawyer glut' could ruin the U.S. | Peter Turchin, Bloomberg

    Congress Is Weak Because Its Members Want It to Be Weak | Yuval Levin, Commentary

    The Revolt of The Public and the Crisis of Authority in the New Millennium | Martin Gurri

    Coming Apart: The State of White America, 1960–2010 | Charles Murray


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


    Are we prepared for exponential technological growth? Sep 13, 2021

    This week, Eric Kohn, Stephen Barrows, and Dan Churchwell discuss the new vaccine mandate President Joe Biden has announced for businesses larger than 100 employees, to be administered by OSHA. In what ways are they failing to consider the role of incentives, and what unintended consequences might this effort have? Will it just drive people further into their political corners and continue to undermine faith in our institutions? Then, they discuss a new piece in Wired from Azeen Azhar about the concept of exponential growth. Are we prepared for a time when technological growth happens at a blinding pace? Can we even effectively prepare for it? Are we at all prepared to cope with the unrest that it will create?


    Subscribe to Acton Unwind, Acton Line & Acton Vault


    The Exponential Age will transform economics forever | Wired


    The Way Amazon Uses Tech to Squeeze Performance Out of Workers Deserves Its Own Name: Bezosism | WSJ


    The Box: How the Shipping Container Made the World Smaller and the World Economy Bigger | Marc Levinson


    The Technology Trap: Capital, Labor, and Power in the Age of Automation | Carl Benedikt Frey


    Ezra Klein Interviews L.M. Sacasas | New York Times


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    The Texas abortion law & the social responsibility of business Sep 07, 2021

    This week, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Stephen Barrows discuss the corporate reactions to SB 8, the new abortion law in Texas, including the pledge from the rideshare company Lyft to pay for any potential legal fees for drivers, as well as to make a $1 million contribution to Planned Parenthood. Is this just responding to the market and what their customers want? Or are politics overwhelming corporate decision making and leading them astray? Then, they discuss the strict Covid-19 lockdown measures in Australia. Will political leaders experience any kind of comeuppance for over-promising and under-delivering on dealing with the pandemic? And finally, Eric, Sam, and Steve all reflect on the 20th anniversary of 9/11.


    Subscribe to the Acton Unwind Podcast


    Defending drivers and women’s access to healthcare | Lyft


    Josh Szeps tweet thread


    Gray Connolly tweet thread


    Australia’s Crazy Covid Response | City Journal


    20 for 20 podcast: 20 Stories for 20 Years Since 9/11


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    We are not cogs for social engineers Aug 30, 2021

    This week on Acton Unwind, Sam Gregg, and special guests Dan Hugger and Michael Miller discuss the ongoing developments in Afghanistan as we approach the 31st deadline. Then, they discuss the $3.5 trillion infrastructure bill and how we can look to C.S. Lewis for guidance on how to respond. What is human infrastructure? Is the United States a civilization-building nation? Is all truth subjective?


    Subscribe to the Acton Unwind Podcast


    Biden’s ‘stimulus’ for a growing economy is all about central control


    Afghanistan I fought for lacks foundation for freedom


    A Taliban 9/11 - William McGurn


    Bio | Michael Miller


    Bio | Dan Hugger


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    Have the Taliban changed? Aug 23, 2021

    This week on Acton Unwind, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and special guest Mustafa Akyol discuss the latest developments in Afghanistan, as the United States works feverishly to get Americans out of the country. How many refugees should the United States accept? What will rule by the Taliban look like? Have they changed at all, as some people have suggested? Then, Eric and Sam discuss the FDA’s final approval of the COVID vaccines, the lockdowns in Australia and New Zealand and the resistance they have produced, and whether our elites and civic leaders are more incompetent than they were in the past, or whether the velocity and availability of information just makes it seem that way.


    Mustafa Akyol


    Reopening Muslim Minds with Mustafa Akyol - Acton Line


    Welcoming the stranger: The dignity and promise of Afghan refugees - Joseph Sunde


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    The Taliban retake Afghanistan Aug 16, 2021

    This week on Acton Unwind, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Dan Hugger discuss the collapse of the Afghanistan government as the United States withdraws from the country nearly 20 years after September 11th and the beginning of combat operations there. We were told a collapse might happen in a year. Instead, it took days. What lessons should be learned from this? And how are we to trust our institutions when they’re constantly shown to be either wrong or lying to us? August 15 marked the 50th anniversary of President Richard Nixon taking the United States off the gold standard. How much of the economic turbulence in the decades since can be blamed on this decision? And, what role can cryptocurrencies play in the future of monetary policy?


    “Why, as a Muslim, I Defend Liberty” by Mustafa Akyol


    “Islam and Economics: A Primer on Markets, Morality, and Justice” by Ali Salman



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.


    They're not gonna pay rent Aug 09, 2021

    In this, the inaugural edition of Acton Unwind, Eric Kohn, Sam Gregg, and Stephen Barrows discuss the extension of the CDC's unconstitutional eviction moratorium, the Biden administration's economically problematic proposal for free community college, and the New Right's infatuation with Viktor Orbán's Hungary.


    ‘Small-Time Landlords “Hanging on By Their Fingernails” as Eviction Moratorium Drags On’ - National Review


    A Landlord Says Her Tenants Are Terrorizing Her. She Can’t Evict Them. - New York Times


    Making community college free has hidden costs - Detroit News


    Acton Institute


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