May 20, 2015

CathCon Daily - 5/20/2015

An intellectual is a person knowledgeable in one field who speaks out only in others. Starting in the early twentieth century, for the first time an ordinary storyteller, a novelist, a short story writer, a poet, a playwright, in certain cases a composer, an artist, or even an opera singer could achieve a tremendous eminence by becoming morally indignant about some public issue. - Tom Wolfe

Pope v. Paganism - William Doino, Jr., First Things

Reforming the Highway Trust Fund - Chris Edwards, Cato

The Myth of Judicial Supremacy - Michael Paulsen, Volokh

Same-Sex Unions and the European Court of Human Rights - Gregor Puppinck, Public Discourse

The Politically Correct Should Not Own Graduation - Jason Stevens, Liberty Law Blog

A Bit of Pessimism on the New Pessimism - Marc DeGirolami, Mirror of Justice

Put Harriet Tubman on the $20 Bill - Doug Bandow, Cato

A Wynne For “Judicial Fraud” - Michael Greve, Liberty Law Blog

Serious...Questions About the Benedict Option - Noah Millman, American Conservative

$5.7 Million Government Program Prompts Bipartisan Disdain - Kate Scanlon, The Federalist

Maglite’s Tony Maglica - Michelle Malkin, Human Events

Dr. Capitalism - John Stossel, Human Events

The Catholic Church's German Crisis - George Weigel, First Things

Beware the Rise of the Pseudo-Intellectual - Maria Popova, Brain Pickings


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