The Return of the Creationists
How can we expect political sense or reason from people who cannot distinguish empirical reality from ancient myth?
A collection of 40 posts
How can we expect political sense or reason from people who cannot distinguish empirical reality from ancient myth?
Our increasing desire to isolate ourselves from supporters of the opposite party can have dire consequences.
It is always tempting to portray one’s political opponents as consumed by some inveterate flaw or social contaminant that marks them as fallen creatures.
Common themes in the emerging constellation of radical groups include apocalyptic beliefs, a “utopian” political agenda, martyr narratives, and a cell-based organizational structure.
If Reade’s claims really do sink Biden in November, the Democrats will merely be reaping what their moral panic has sowed.
There is a certain kind of progressive writer who has convinced himself that there is only one way to be gay; and if you don’t fit that mold, you’re a class-war traitor who doesn’t even count as part of the LGB community.
One reason might be that they worry about the second kind of harm that accompanies gentrification: the changing culture and character of neighborhoods.
Walt is always thinking of ways to blame the most vexing international problems on liberal hegemony. From proliferation to terrorism to Trump, he sees its malignant influence everywhere he looks.
At bottom, the reparations debate is a debate about the relationship between history and ethics, between the past and the Good.
Activists and Twitter blowhards, some of them with thousands of followers, have run roughshod over the facts with a false narrative of grotesque privilege colliding with noble oppression that confirmed their ideological preferences.