No. 10 Story of 2023: Solzhenitsyn’s Prophetic Warning — and Meyer’s Counterpoint of Hope

20th century, abortion, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Anxiety, Atheism, Bolsheviks, Charles Darwin, Communism, crime, Culture & Ethics, Dallas Conference on Science and Faith, Dante Alighieri, demons, evil, Faith & Science, fentanyl, fine-tuning, Fyodor Dostoevsky, gender identity, homeless, illegitimacy, Inferno, Intelligent Design, Jonathan Choe, Judeo-Christian tradition, mutilation, Promiscuity, Return of the God Hypothesis, Russia, Soviet Union, Stephen Meyer, suicide, Templeton Prize, universe
You would have to be willfully blind, or just stay far away from our major city centers, to miss some of the more obvious signs of the spiritual crisis. Source
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“Eugenicons”? Call Them What They Are — Social Darwinists

alt-right, anti-Semitism, axioms, Charles Murray, Compact, conservatism, crime, Culture, Culture & Ethics, Democrats, elections, eugenic conservative, eugenicon, eugenics, Evolution, Evolution News, Holocaust, Human Zoos, John West, liberalism, Michael Lind, Milton Friedman, neologisms, Nick Fuentes, philosophy, policies, political parties, Politics, pseudoscientific racists, refrigerator, Republicans, Richard Hanania, Social Darwinists, social ills, Steve Sailer, United States
It’s sad when once-useful words turn stale and disintegrate — like losing an old friend. Source
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Euthanasia’s Cultural Collateral Damage: Less Respect for Human Life

bioethics, Canada, cerebral palsy, Christiane Belzile, crime, Culture, Culture & Ethics, Edmonton Journal, euthanasia, euthanasia consciousness, Francois Belzile, human life, insulin, Jack Kevorkian, judges, manslaughter, Medicine, murder, Robert Latimer, science
Canada has fallen off the euthanasia moral cliff by allowing broad categories of people to be killed by doctors as a means of ending “suffering.” Source
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Can Animals Be Held Criminally Responsible?

American Philosophical Quarterly, animal rights, animals, bears, cannibalism, consciousness, crime, Culture & Ethics, defendants, Ed Simon, free will, human exceptionalism, humans, moral agency, moral capacity, morality, Neuroscience & Mind, Nonhuman Rights Project, plaintiffs, Psyche, Raegan Scharfetter, responsibility, science
While the idea is handled provocatively in philosophy literature, in practice, animals are envisioned as plaintiffs, not defendants, in animal rights cases. Source
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Court Rules Elephant Does Not Have Rights

activists, animal rights, animals, Bronx Zoo, Children, crime, Culture & Ethics, duties, elephants, Happy (elephant), human rights, humans, illness, immaturity, injury, judges, New York State, News Media, Nonhuman Rights Project, people, rights, slaves, sophistry, species barrier, women, writ of habeas corpus
I have written here several times about the attempt by the Nonhuman Rights Project (NHRP) to “break the species barrier.” Source
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“Ecocide” — Drive to Make Environmental Damage Legal Equivalent of Genocide Accelerates

Alberta tar sands, crime, Culture & Ethics, Deep Ecology, Dior Fall Sow, ecocide, Environmentalism, genocide, nature rights, Nazis, Philippe Sands, pollution, Pope Francis, The Guardian, The Hague, United Nations, University College London, war crimes
If either or both of these radical proposals become law, human thriving and economic prosperity will be brought to a screeching halt. Source
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Woke Medicine Is Very Bad for Everyone’s Health

abortion, affirmative action, Baltimore, black babies, Black Lives Matter, Cambridge, Chicago, crime, Critical race theory, Detroit, Education, envy, eugenics, Fathers, gangs, George Floyd, Greed, hate, healthcare, Husbands, leftists, lust, Massachusetts, medical care, Medicine, murder, poverty, pride, Racism, rape, Riots, structural racism, welfare dependency
There is a major effort in medical education today to indoctrinate students and resident physicians into Critical Theory. Source
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Weekend Reading: Heretics and Inquisitors

BioEssays, censorship, creationism, crime, Culture, Darwinists, Douglas Axe, establishment, Evolution News, free speech, Günter Bechly, Heresy, history, Inquisition, Intelligent Design, Italy, Middle Ages, mystery, novels, Politics, Richard Sternberg, The Name of the Rose, Umberto Eco, William of Baskerville
Years ago, reading Umberto Eco’s novel The Name of the Rose, I got bogged down early on and stopped. Rereading it now, I can’t imagine what I found boring. It’s great! A learned crime-mystery about murders in a 14th-century Italian abbey, it deals in part with the relationship between heretics and inquisitors. What Eco relates (via his protagonist William of Baskerville) has a lot of contemporary relevance. Intelligent design is a heresy against the backdrop of conformist evolutionary thinking, and ID proponents must ever beware of Darwinist inquisitors. (See the recent threat of censorship from the biology journal BioEssays.) Eco observes that inquisitions generate heretics, rather than stamping them out. That is true. Many of the leading ID scientists (Axe, Sternberg, Bechly, and others) came to us because they were…
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