The patriarchs shall inherit the Earth

In Foreign Policy, of all places, there’s a long article by Phillip Longman called “The Return of Patriarchy.” The thesis paragraph is near the end:

Advanced societies are growing more patriarchal, whether they like it or not. In addition to the greater fertility of conservative segments of society, the rollback of the welfare state forced by population aging and decline will give these elements an additional survival advantage, and therefore spur even higher fertility. As governments hand back functions they once appropriated from the family, notably support in old age, people will find that they need more children to insure their golden years, and they will seek to bind their children to them through inculcating traditional religious values akin to the Bible’s injunction to honor thy mother and father.

I find this encouraging, particularly since I’ve been more than a little frustrated by money lately. The Washington area is a tough place to raise kids for a variety of reasons, not least financially. But if my four children are going to promote a patriarchal way of life in America, it’s worth it!

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Is abortion good for society?

It’s a question that rarely gets asked, since it’s almost always framed in terms of “rights,” either the baby’s or the mothers. The wisest columnist in the world, Mark Steyn, takes on that question:

…So, whether or not her remarks were “outrageous” (the Democrats’ Lyn Allison), “insensitive” (the Greens’ Rachel Siewert), “offensively discriminatory” (Sydney’s Daily Telegraph) and “bigoted” (this newspaper), I salute Danna Vale. You don’t have to agree with her argument that Australia’s aborting itself out of recognition and that therefore Islam will inherit by default to think it’s worth asking a couple of questions:
* Is abortion in society’s interest?
* Can a society become more Muslim in its demographic character without also becoming more Muslim in its political and civil character?
The first one’s easy: One can understand that 17-year-old Glenys working the late shift at Burger King and knocked up by some bloke who scrammed 10 minutes after conception may believe it’s in her interest to exercise “a woman’s right to choose”, but the state has absolutely no interest in encouraging women in general to exercise that choice.
Quite the opposite: given that today’s wee bairns are tomorrow’s funders of otherwise unsustainable social programs, all responsible governments should be seriously natalist. The reason Europe, Russia and Japan are doomed boils down to a big lack of babies. Abortion isn’t solely responsible for that but it’s certainly part of the problem.

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Dear Mr. Vice President

Generally, I don’t mind seeing some politician going hunting with his buddies. Not that I’m for it: I think hunting animals with firearms is a rather unequal contest, and really not in accord with a Gospel way of life. Still, I can’t demand that everyone live to that standard. I’m willing to tolerate sport hunting.
However, I think it’s a bad idea for Mr. Cheney for a couple of practical reasons.
First, I think it’s bad politics: hunting has the image of being generally a rich men’s sport. This isn’t something that the Veep, with his WASP-businessman image, should seek out.
Second, it’s not prudent: the risk, small as it is, of being injured oneself or, God forbid, injuring someone else is not acceptable for a sitting President or Vice-President. When you go into the top two jobs, you simply should put hunting on hold for eight years.
Now that Mr. Cheney’s had an accident serious enough to put a friend in the hospital, he should admit his blunder and do an act of penance for it: take a stand for hunting safety by giving up the sport. For him to persist in hunting at his age, after having made this somewhat dangerous mistake, creates an argument for banning hunting generally: probably not something he wants.
From a Catholic point of view, of course, safety — protecting human life — is more important than sport.

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Could you spare a prayer?

In Delaware, a bill to legalize human cloning for scientific purposes is up for a vote in the legislature Thursday, January 19. It’s been postponed a couple of times and modified a little, in the wake of the campaign opposing it.
Rae Stabosz writes:

On January 12, the proponents of Senate Bill 80 (SB80) postponed what was to have been the final vote on this bill in the wake of our Rose and a Prayer campaign. Through this campaign, made up of Catholic and non-Catholic Christians throughout the state, 1000+ Delawareans committed to one hour of prayer each during the eight days preceding the vote. The prayer was intercessory, to ask the Lord to keep destructive embryonic research from Delaware. This campaign also sent a rose to the representative of each of the citizens who took part in that prayer commitment, asking them to vote against the bill.
The bill has been modified to make it more palatable to those representatives who are on the fence or who changed their votes to “No” after our campaign. It still authorizes destruction of human embryos for research. This Thursday, January 19, the bill is to come to a vote finally.
We would like to go beyond the state of Delaware to ask folks throughout the Christian blogosphere to join us in prayer between now and Thursday. Pray that almighty God would hear His people and not allow destructive embryonic research to come to Delaware. Pray that He strengthen and purify those who fight against this legislation. Pray that He enlighten the minds and change the hearts of those who support the bill but are open to truth. And pray that He confound the Powers that deceive people and work to unleash yet another horrendous attack on the dignity and value of human life, this time in the name of scientific good.
Our plea is for prayers. This is our strength, this is our power, as disciples of Christ. If, in addition, anyone would like to contribute money to help us run radio and newspaper ads between now and Thursday, see http://www.aroseandaprayer.org.

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