It’s easy to let our Twenty-First Century conceit cause us to make analogies to today’s problems. Climate change, immigration, resource management are just a few that come to mind.
4 CommentsAlessandro Camp Author Website
It’s easy to let our Twenty-First Century conceit cause us to make analogies to today’s problems. Climate change, immigration, resource management are just a few that come to mind.
4 CommentsBetween submarines peeking out of the Atlantic surf, rock ‘n roll radio stations on the airwaves and now drones doing surveillance over Manhattan, I knew 1926 had undeniably been adulterated by my presence.
1 CommentLike British explorers Richard Burton and John Hanning Speke who searched for the source of the Nile River in the mid-19th Century, I did this expecting to find the truth about climate change shrouded in scientific controversy and political intrigue. Never did I expect to discover instead a carefully scripted fantasy used by alarmists to gin up interest in their movement.
18 CommentsIn time, unremitting hatred loses its effectiveness.
2 CommentsAmerica cannot truly be great unless it pulls itself out of the gutter and again aspires to the rhetorical ambitions of its Founders.
1 CommentWhen Americans sort through the hysteria of the past few years, I am hopeful – bordering on confident – that they will reject the opinions of those who oppose the founding principles of our country and embrace the freedoms that the bravest among us have fought and died to preserve.
1 CommentWhen political will takes precedence over truth, we the people have nothing based in law, ethics or morality to guide the workings of our society. All that’s left is raw power, and that’s something everyone – no matter what their politics – should fear.
6 CommentsAs history shows, more great civilizations have collapsed due to public ignorance and apathy than because of a failure of leadership.
4 Comments