Gratitude Redux
June 12, 2006
Will Wilkinson does a just if labored fisk of Anya Kamenetz' assumptions in her NYTimes objection to unpaid internships.
June 12, 2006
Will Wilkinson does a just if labored fisk of Anya Kamenetz' assumptions in her NYTimes objection to unpaid internships.
March 18, 2006
I became an American, in Lee Harris' terms, when I gave a group of teenage hitchhikers in the Midlands of England (don't ask) a long ride North, and listened to them explain to me that American women are brash and selfish and disgusting. They knew, they watched the imported syndicated situation comedies.
"Uh..."
"No, we've seen them."
They didn't offer anything but their opinions. They didn't say thank you when they were delivered to the City Centre in Manchester.
They're almost pensioners now, in the sad shadow Britain has become.
Courtesy Relapsed Catholic
Update: Will, at One Cosmos, relates a brief correspondence with Fatima-phobic Euro Woman.
March 17, 2006
So, the prediction today is for a high of 70 degrees Farenheit, and we're having a conversation that includes the word "chilly." Reading an amusing blog from Winnipeg. We conclude this little vignette sums up the conjunction of "cosmopolitan" and "spoiled."
Remarkable Celtic crosses, though pictures of Ireland add "damp" to the "chilly" tag.
Via Amy Welborn, who also has a memento of the Pope as a probing young scholar and loyal friend.
Update: From her link, a Lenten
image. Corpus Christi Procession winds through a bombed, ruined Munich.
It's a site where we also learn that enthusiastic fans of the Bavarian Benedict XVI denominate themselves Benaddicts.
Most of the change we think we see in life/
Is due to truths being in and out of favour.
Robert Frost, The Black Cottage
"Stuff that may or may not interest you" from the BBC.
Via J-Walk
November 17, 2004
The departure of Princess Sayako of Japan for her wedding.

Dressed in the traditional multi-coloured kimono,
Princess Sayako visited shrines in the Imperial Palace grounds that are
dedicated to Japanese gods and emperors of the past.... Japan does not allow women to take the throne, and
therefore the youngest child of Emperor Akihito and Empress Michiko
must leave the imperial family after the wedding.
One function of royalty for the populace is to act out important turning points in life writ larger than one person's story. Big Deal! So a daughter is getting married. But the numinousness with which these figures of ancestral importance shine, is dramatic at a near-archetypal level, and in those terms may be said to justify their careful training, their wealth, their prominence. It is a sacrificial and harrowing existence for many royals, sustained only out of duty and taboo.
A tender-hearted child grows up, gets married, goes away. Life. Fully felt by virtue of rite and pageant.
BBC story via the ever-varied Althouse.
With thanks especially to the illustrator Felicia Bond.
Emerging momentarily to pile on with Kathy Shaidle's anti-dhimmitude.
Get your environmental sin quantified, pay the fee, get a sticker. What would Martin Luther say?
Fascinating facts about Japan. Via Marginal Revolution.
-- Monjushiri Bosatsu, expressing wisdom, youthfulness, and beauty --
We regard him as riding the sharp-toothed world, safely encased in an iridescent bubble of shimmering reflective Compassion.
In our opinion.
