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Culture Law and Policy

Quiz of the Day — Who Said This?

Which religiously-motivated Christian politician said the following recently:

if we scrub language of all religious content, we forfeit the imagery and terminology through which millions of Americans understand both their personal morality and social justice. Imagine Lincoln’s Second Inaugural Address without reference to “the judgments of the Lord,” or King’s I Have a Dream speech without reference to “all of God’s children.” Their summoning of a higher truth helped inspire what had seemed impossible and move the nation to embrace a common destiny.

……….

After all, the problems of poverty and racism, the uninsured and the unemployed, are not simply technical problems in search of the perfect ten point plan. They are rooted in both societal indifference and individual callousness – in the imperfections of man.

Solving these problems will require changes in government policy; it will also require changes in hearts and minds.

………

But what I am suggesting is this – secularists are wrong when they ask believers to leave their religion at the door before entering into the public square. Frederick Douglass, Abraham Lincoln, Williams Jennings Bryan, Dorothy Day, Martin Luther King – indeed, the majority of great reformers in American history – were not only motivated by faith, but repeatedly used religious language to argue for their cause. To say that men and women should not inject their “personal morality” into public policy debates is a practical absurdity; our law is by definition a codification of morality, much of it grounded in the Judeo-Christian tradition.

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Culture

Phrase of the Day: "Jumped the Shark"

I saw this phrase used today on an email list for cyberlaw professors. I guess I’m losing my pop-culture bearings, but I hadn’t heard it before. It refers to something that was once great but has since declined in popularity. The reference is to an episode of Happy Days when Fonzie jumped a shark on waterskis. (Citation: Urban Dictionary.)

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Culture

More Proof the Terrorists Haven't Won

The September Concert: all around New York, there’s music today. I caught a bit of The Brooke Fox Band at Madison Square Park during lunch. Celebrating life in NYC on a beautiful and horrible day.

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Culture History

Remember

It’s 9-11 today in New York. It’s hard to believe that only five years have passed, and just as hard to believe that it’s been five years already. I don’t have anything profound to say that won’t sound treacly. On 9/11/2001, I saw the smoke rising from the towers from outside my office in Newark, NJ, where I was a young law firm partner. Today, I took the train into my office in New York, where I’m a somewhat older young professor, on a bright blue morning just like that morning five years ago. Time goes on, but we have to remember.

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Culture

LiberJesus

liberty.jpg

My buddy Tom Girsch of Lean Left sent me this picture, which he took in Memphis. Tom and I disagree about lots of things — stuff like politics (well, sometimes) and religion — but we agree on this: ugh!!! This is wrong on so many levels. If it really cost $260K as Tom reports, that’s a sin. And the message it sends to those outside the Christian faith is awful. Some of us may look at this and think, “yes, Jesus gives freedom to the tired, the hungry, the huddled masses, through the cross.” That’s true, and it’s an important message. But for most people outside the American evangelical subculture, this says “America: by, for, and of Christians, and no one else.” Wrong, wrong, wrong, and wrong! Don’t confuse our national Constitutional liberties with our freedom in Christ. Our Constituional liberties are precious. Iin many ways they are rooted in Christian anthropology, but it is Christian anthropology as filtered through Enlightenment ideals, which are bound in culture and time, and which are not always particularly “Christian.” Our freedom in Christ is far greater, and transcends time, territory and culture. The message of freedom through the cross should be proclaimed without this cultural baggage.

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Culture

Two Kinds of Football

Prosthesis writes about the differing philosophies of soccer and American football. Hmmm, interesting. As a Yank living in Europe this summer, it’s been fun to watch football (er, soccer) instead of American sports. But I’m not sure about the whole passing backwards thing. Soccer players pass backwards to set up plays downfield. There’s still a forward-marching telos. Even in U.S. football, you move backwards a bit sometimes to set up a play, as in a pitch to the fullback, or a left guard pulling behind the line to support a sweep play.

The really interesting comparison is the willingness of soccer teams to play for a tie. But even then, teams accept a tie because a tie results in a point in the standings, whereas a loss equals no points (and three points to the opponent for the win), so the telos still is forward-looking.

Maybe a better place to look is golf, where you have to score lower in order to win. The last shall be first? And in my case, golf also inculcates the virtue of patience in the face of great suffering.

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Culture

What Makes America Great

Today, I realized that the backyard barbeque is one of the things that makes America great. It was sunny, in the mid-70’s, and all the neighborhood was out to play. Around six or so, everyone fired up their grills and the block was filled with the fragrant smoke of a dozen burgers. I lit up the outdoor fire pit and dug out some marshmallows, chocolate and graham crackers, and everyone gravitated back to our yard. We chatted, we scarfed smores, the kids ran around with the dog — and we experienced real community. This is what freedom is all about.

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Schiavo and Judicial Activism

I was listening to the Sean Hannity show on my way into the office this afternoon. He was discussing the Florida District Court’s ruling denying the plaintiffs’ request for a temporary restraining order under the federal statute passed by Congress (the “Schiavo Act”). Hannity stated that he believed the court’s opinion did not even reference the Schiavo Act. He was hammering the federal court’s decision as symptomatic of the arrogance of the judiciary. Senator Rick Santorum came on the Hannity show and claimed the Schiavo Act required the federal court to order the reinsertion of nutrition and hydration tubes pending a full hearing on the merits. Santorum also decried the ruling as an abuse of judicial power. This seems to be the Christian Right’s theme: a National Right to Life Committee spokesman referred to the federal court’s decision as a “gross abuse of judicial power”; Christian Defense Coalition Director Pat Mahoney, quoted in a Focus on the Family article, attributed the federal court’s decision to “an arrogant and activist federal judiciary.”

Unfortunately, all of these comments about judicial activism are wrong.