“Planes, Trains and Automobiles”… and Redemption

By |2025-11-26T20:15:14-06:00November 23rd, 2012|Categories: Audio/Video, Culture, Film, Stephen M. Klugewicz, Thanksgiving|

A lighthearted romp at first blush, “Planes, Trains and Automobiles” tells the story of how the example of simple goodness can be transformational… The category of “Thanksgiving movies” is a select one indeed, but it is not meant as faint praise to crown John Hughes’ 1987 film, Planes, Trains and Automobiles, the greatest Thanksgiving film [...]

A Wild Turkey’s Thanksgiving

By |2018-11-21T19:35:30-06:00November 23rd, 2012|Categories: Poetry, Stephen Masty, Thanksgiving|

Mister Franklin, humans call him; Turkeys call him Gentle Ben. Lovingly we keep his memory From our tree or field or fen, Once our day of thanks ensures That some of us outlasted yours. Wild and canny, lithe and limber, Peaceful as a bird can be, Perching high in Yankee timber, We, true Sons of [...]

Thanksgiving, the Puritans, and St. Augustine

By |2018-11-19T19:42:14-06:00November 22nd, 2012|Categories: Peter A. Lawler, St. Augustine, Thanksgiving|

Thanksgiving is the holiday that brings us all together, whether or not we’re Christians and whether or not we’re American citizens. It’s the first holiday of the Holiday Season that begins around now and lasts until New Year. We’re so sure that saying Merry Christmas is intolerant and dogmatic that we’re all about Happy Holidays—an [...]

The Religious Roots of Thanksgiving

By |2020-10-01T16:45:31-05:00November 21st, 2012|Categories: American Republic, Thanksgiving|

The religious roots of Thanksgiving speak to the essence of America, and against the danger of over-consumption. The Pilgrims remind us that Thanksgiving is not all about turkey and touchdowns. The religious roots of Thanksgiving speak to the essence of America, and against the danger of over-consumption. The Pilgrims of Plymouth Colony weren’t the first Europeans [...]

A Marriage of Personal Convenience: The Unity of Economic and Social Conservatism

By |2014-12-30T16:55:37-06:00November 20th, 2012|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Civil Society, Conservatism, Natural Law, Neoconservatism, Social Order|Tags: , |

Over on the First Things blog, Robert George has blessed us, yet again, with the conventional and convenient wisdom of (Catholic) neoconservatism. The post, titled “No Mere Marriage of Convenience: The Unity of Economic and Social Conservatism,” is a sustained argument for just how convenient this marriage of utility and principle really is, and why [...]

A Forward-Thinking Conservatism

By |2014-03-19T10:16:13-05:00November 19th, 2012|Categories: Conservatism, Gerald Russello, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

There has been much commentary concerning a David Brooks editorial that in turn cites Rod Dreher’s article on what it means to be a conservative. Both Brooks and Dreher return to Russell Kirk and his ten principles of conservatism, to define what Brooks describes as the lost half of the “conservative mind.” That half is [...]

The Roots of Modernity in Perversions of Christianity

By |2023-05-21T11:32:09-05:00November 18th, 2012|Categories: E.B., Eva Brann, Liberal Learning, Modernity, Senior Contributors, St. John's College|

The part of the title of this talk which I asked to have announced is “The Roots of Modernity.” But there is a second part which I wanted to tell you myself. The full title is: “The Roots of Modernity in Perversions of Christianity.” The reason I wanted to tell you myself is that it [...]

Just Beyond Our Grasp: Personal Reflections on Christian Humanism

By |2016-08-03T10:37:23-05:00November 16th, 2012|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christendom, Christian Humanism, Christianity, Christopher Dawson, Conservatism, J.R.R. Tolkien, Natural Law, Russell Kirk, Western Civilization|

Over the last decade and a half, as many readers of TIC have probably noted, I’ve had the blessed opportunity of researching and writing about Russell Kirk (1918-1994), generally agreed upon as the founder of post-war American conservatism. At first, I did this mostly as a hobby, having become intensely interested in Christian Humanism through [...]

The Sharpening of the Conservative Mind

By |2013-12-24T10:17:43-06:00November 16th, 2012|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Books, Bruce Frohnen, Conservatism, Edmund Burke|Tags: , |

Virtue and the Promise of Conservatism: The Legacy of Burke & Tocqueville, by Bruce Frohnen In his role as a professor of English literature, Thomas Howard sometimes gives his class a list of the following words: majesty, magnanimity, valor, courtesy, grace, chastity, virginity, nobility, splendor, ceremony, taboo, mystery, purity. The reaction he gets is quite [...]

Main Street U.S.A.: A Flip-Flops President

By |2014-01-22T17:10:12-06:00November 15th, 2012|Categories: Culture, Politics|

We mighta, coulda, woulda, shoulda, still-some-day-may elect a president serious about the matter of the nation’s freedoms. Or, possibly, not. The second possibility—so an ancient mariner reflects—arises from a sea change in our culture. It could be that more than half of us—a fast-rising proportion—don’t understand “serious” the way it was understood until half a [...]

Does Government Debt Burden Our Grandkids?

By |2014-01-23T19:10:09-06:00November 15th, 2012|Categories: Economics, Political Economy|Tags: |

In late 2011 and early 2012, there was a fierce debate among several prominent economists on the possible ways in which government deficits today could impose a burden on future generations. Specifically, Keynesian economists Dean Baker and Paul Krugman were arguing that right-wing concerns over the debt burden were nonsensical, because (for the most part) [...]

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