Money Email of the Day

A reader asks:

I’ve been reading your blog for a long time now and always turn to it when I want some lively and intelligent commentary on what’s happening. However, I must confess that I have been, all along, mystified by your references to "Money quote."
Though I have a generally good grasp of who the pundits are, how have I missed who or what "Money" is? Is this question comparable to, say, asking Tech Support which key is the "Any Key?" (as in "Press any key…") Am I the only one who doesn’t know? I guess you can’t answer individual questions, but thought I’d throw you this one in case others wonder too. Maybe my son will know.

Maybe he will. How old is he?

The Leopold Mystery II

A reader calls my attention to this 2005 piece by Howie Kurtz on Jason Leopold. Money quote:

Jason Leopold got a journalistic black eye three years ago when Salon retracted a story the freelancer had written about a Bush administration official, saying it could not authenticate the piece.
Now the former Los Angeles Times and Dow Jones reporter has written a book, "Off the Record," that criticizes journalists as lazy. Oh, and by the way, Leopold says he engaged in "lying, cheating and backstabbing," is a former cocaine addict, served [three days in jail] for grand larceny, repeatedly tried to kill himself and has battled mental illness his whole life.

He could still be right, of course. And Rove could still be indicted. But I wouldn’t bet on it.

The Economist on McCain

A shrewd take (for subscribers only):

What Mr McCain’s trip to Liberty University is really about is a subtle but substantial change in the balance of power and ideology in the Republican Party. Mr McCain is neither a wilful maverick nor a liberal who somehow found himself in the wrong place. He is a different kind of Republican‚Äîpart sunbelt conservative (who believes in limited government), and part Teddy Roosevelt Republican (who believes in using the power of the state to solve pressing problems such as growing inequality and global warming). This ideology represents a challenge to many Republican power-brokers, particularly tax-cutters and lobbyists. That is why Mr McCain provokes such a furious debate within the party. But his particular range of ideas probably presents the Republicans’ best chance of winning a third presidential election in a row.

I dislike some of McCain’s big government impulses; but he cannot conceivably be worse than Bush on that score. His impulse to meedle, and even to bully, his opponents is not pretty either. But if the GOP passes him by, they will, I think, come to regret it. And so will America.

Christianism, Debated

A reader comments:

There is one thing that complicates your argument that should be noted. Your argument turns on the distinction between a mere worldview and a religion. What complicates this is that certain secular worldviews have, over the years, taken on the characteristics of religion (minus the Deity), especially the notion that the worldview is self-evidently inerrant and righteous. Communism (and socialism more generally) is the classic example of such a secular-worldview-cum-secular-religion – hence, perhaps, the Christianist tendency to conflate the two.

TCS Daily recently posted an article describing how, and why, socialism was transformed from a reason-based worldview, as it was conceived by Karl Marx, into a de facto secular religion by followers such as Georges Sorel. The short version is that Sorel recognized religion’s power to transform its believers into a dedicated and united "band of brothers," and wanted to harness this power for the cause of socialism. In other words, the blurring of the distinction between a worldview and a religion, now practiced by Christianists (and made into a veritable art form by Islamic supremacists), is ironically a page taken from the playbook of a radical secular socialist!

My point is that fundamentalism is firstly a state of mind and secondly a form of spirituality that can brook no error and demands submission to ultimate authority. The most successful fundamentalisms have been and still are ostensibly religious ones. But secular ones have thrived as well – Communism, Fascism, multiculturalism. I see conservatism, in contrast, as the antidote to all such ideology. The Christianists see it as a new doctrine, welded to an ancient faith. Hence the danger they pose – to politics, to faith, and to conservatism as a political tradition of limited government and human freedom.

(All this and much more in my forthcoming book, "The Conservative Soul.")

Quote for the Day II

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"Let him say what the government is, if it be not a tyranny, which the men of our choice have conferred on our President, and the President of our choice has assented to, and accepted over the friendly strangers to whom the mild spirit of our country and its laws have pledged hospitality and protection: that the men of our choice have more respected the bare suspicions of the President, than the solid right of innocence, the claims of justification, the sacred force of truth, and the forms and substance of law and justice. In questions of power, then, let no more be heard of confidence in man, but bind him down from mischief by the chains of the Constitution," – Thomas Jefferson, 8th Kentucky Resolution (Oct. 1798), protesting the Alien and Sedition Acts, and particularly the efforts to criminalize journalists undertaken by Adams pursuant to those acts.

(Photo: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty.)

Malkin Award Nominee

"Not only will [mass deportation] work, but one can easily estimate how long it would take. If it took the Germans less than four years to rid themselves of 6 million Jews, many of whom spoke German and were fully integrated into German society, it couldn’t possibly take more than eight years to deport 12 million illegal aliens, many of whom don’t speak English and are not integrated into American society," Vox Day, WorldNet Daily.

Jim Kelly

It’s not a bad way to leave your job – picking up two National Magazine Awards for "general excellence" and a single-topic issue. Since he’s my boss, you can dismiss the following as a suck-up. I still mean every word of it. Jim Kelly is an editor a writer dreams about: open to new ideas, challenging, wise, and, above all these things, a prince of a human being. Thanks for your support and advice, Jim. And thanks for the party.