The
following is a summary of the August, 2004, issue of the St.
Croix Review: In
“War in the Twenty-First Century,” Angus MacDonald
writes that the world is divided between those that trade together and
those that don’t—and the latter are mostly Islamic states. It is
the responsibility of the U.S. to overcome militant Islam and thus
allow peace to emerge. No other nation has the ability. Colonel
Melvin Kriesel believes that we do not have a firm grasp of essentials
in “Know Thy Enemy: Defeating the Islamic Jihad.” He
writes that we are facing “one of the deadliest psychological
warfare campaigns ever waged.” He urges us to seek for the
“political and psychological centers of gravity in this conflict.”
He shares what he thinks we must do to win the war. In
the words of Osama bin-Laden and like-minded clerics is “Bin-Laden’s
Declaration of War.” In
“One Man’s Passion for Freedom—and Encounters with
Extraordinary People” Allan Brownfeld reports on the
accomplishments of Leonard Sussman and his fellows in the
establishment and actions of Freedom House; in “Whatever
Happened to Federalism and the Essential Role of the States?”
he reexamines the Tenth Amendment and the thinking of John C. Calhoun. Herbert
London relates, among other things, one of Reagan’s effective jokes
in the middle of a meeting in “My
Encounters with President Ronald Reagan”; he writes that the
nation is being tested by our terrorist enemies, and that it is
necessary for our survival to draw upon our American Heritage to bind
the needed resolve to the war effort in “Overcoming National
Despair”; he considers recent comments made by South
Carolina Senator Ernest Hollings in “Anti-Semitism on This
Side of the Atlantic.” “His
Own Words” is a collection of some of Ronald Reagan’s
statements. On
the occasion of Ronald Reagan’s 83rd birthday, Margaret Thatcher
gave this speech, “A Tribute to Ronald Reagan.” Edwin
Meese III, in “A Courageous Leader,” cites three
instances in which Reagan held to his principles and carried through
on his policy in the face of severe criticism. In
“Memories of Ronald Reagan” Murray Weidenbaum
recalls his time with the president. Paul
Kengor is an historian whose subject is Ronald Reagan. In “Ronald
Reagan’s Rainbow” he provides little known details about
his youth, his mother, and his writings on Alzheimer’s years before
he developed the disease. Pat
Buchanan provides a brief overview of Reagan’s life and
accomplishments, in “Goodbye to ‘the Gipper.’”
John
Howard touches on Reagan’s motives in “Leadership
Reconsidered.” In
“Reagan’s Obit in the New York Times” Arnold
Beichman refutes the view published in the Times. Craig
Payne takes a common sense approach in “Gays and the Meaning
of Marriage.” Thomas
Martin, in “The Flightless Birds of Academe,” uses
the flights of migrating geese and the writings of one of the first
generation of aviators to impress on us the importance of struggle and
shared experience. Too many of us live lives within the limits of a
coop, though we are intended to “outwit the forces of nature” and
to practice a craft, as generations before us had. Michael
Swisher reviews Portrait of the Dynasty, by Peter and
Rochelle Schweizer, which is a study of the history of President G. W.
Bush’s family. |
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