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  • ‘It’s Not Whether We’ll Have Blasphemy Laws but Which Ones’

    ‘It’s Not Whether We’ll Have Blasphemy Laws but Which Ones’0

    Pride Month is here—time for Western nations to once again roll out the rainbow flags and treat any associated criticism as blasphemy. For anyone who thinks I’m being witty and metaphorical with the term blasphemy, I invite them to read the latest headlines. This just in from NBC News: “LGBTQ flag burned at California elementary

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  • Environmentalism and the Immoral Low Ground

    Environmentalism and the Immoral Low Ground0

    Last month, the Biden administration’s Environmental Protection Agency proposed new power plant regulations that would put harsh limits on the amount of carbon dioxide released while producing electricity. This comes from the same administration pushing to electrify all parts of daily life, from driving to cooking. As if slamming the power grid with artificial demand is not enough, now the

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  • Thoughts to Words: A Case for Journaling

    Thoughts to Words: A Case for Journaling0

    When I turned 13, my parents gave me a blue-flowered notebook as a birthday present. With that notebook as a catalyst, I began recording my thoughts, wishes, and experiences. My topics were erratic and impulsive: I’d write about everyday experiences, abstract musings, and my impetuous future plans. At the time, I wasn’t sure that anything

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  • DeSantis Reminds Public Universities of an Uncomfortable Truth

    DeSantis Reminds Public Universities of an Uncomfortable Truth0

    “He who pays the piper calls the tune” is a familiar proverb. Wiktionary tells us it means that “The person paying for something is the one who gets to say how it should be done.” It’s difficult if not impossible to argue against its wisdom. What’s the alternative? I suppose it would be something like,

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  • That Way Madness Lies: Transgenderism and Linguistics

    That Way Madness Lies: Transgenderism and Linguistics0

    “The ordinary acceptation of words in their relation to things was changed as men thought fit,” Thucydides records in his History of the Peloponnesian War. Those lines, written some 2,400 years ago, carry remarkable relevance for today as we witness contemporary society commit the same error of the Corcyreans that Thucydides commented on. And it’s a

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  • Singing: Our Battle Cry of Truth and Hope

    Singing: Our Battle Cry of Truth and Hope0

    By now you may have seen the video of a children’s choir singing the national anthem in the U.S. Capitol rotunda. The children are seemingly well-trained, and their training is made ever more beautiful by the acoustics of their surroundings. What’s unique about this video, however, is not their singing, but the fact that the

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