The
following is a summary of the December, 2005, issue of the St.
Croix Review: Angus
MacDonald writes in “Under God” that all cultures
believe in God, that Americans do not lack a belief in God, but that
our definitions of God are inadequate. Allan
Brownfeld, in “Lobbyists: An Increasingly Influential
Non-elected Fourth Branch of Government” reveals the depths
to which our national government has sunk: there are now 35,000
lobbyists in Washington, 272 of them are former legislators and
command “sky-high” salaries; in “Remembering Stalin’s
Purges and How Idealistic Western Adherents to the False Communist
Dream Were Among His Victims” he reviews Francis Beckett’s
book Stalin’s British Victims. Herbert
London, in “A Challenge the West Must Confront,”
writes that inside Western countries Islamists have intimated our
leaders, and are immune from criticism, giving Islamists an advantage
in the war of ideas; in “Gratuitous Politics and Profanity in
the Arts” he writes about the spreading tendency of
entertainers to engage in political diatribe in the course of the
show; in “Bill Bennett and the P.C. Police” he says
that professional demagogues have smeared a good man; in “Pay
Check Protection in California” he says the some people, 200
years after the American Revolution, are still fighting for
independence. Murray
Weidenbaum writes about the attributes of Reagan that inspired loyalty
and success in “Working for President Ronald Reagan.”
In “How
a Small Band of Protesters Unmasked the Nazi Regime’s Fear of
Unrest,” Solveig Eggerz reveals details about Nazi persecution
of Jews: Non-Jewish spouses of Jews showed tremendous courage and
resilience, and saved their spouses from death. In one public protest
the Nazi regime was forced to back down by Aryan wives: Jewish
husbands had been rounded up, but were then released because of
demonstrations. Solveig Eggerz shows that family ties and traditional
culture were forces with which the Nazis were hesitant to confront. Jigs
Gardner, in “The Culture of Conservatives” asks
conservatives to broaden our understanding of culture so that we may
appreciate fiction. He says that the least interesting thing about a
man are his political opinions, and that the most profound influences
are those that are seldom remarked on in political articles. In “Two
More Mein Kampfs to Treat with Complacency” James Lees
writes about two warnings we received in 1998. One threat (from Osama
Bin Laden) has been realized with a vengeance with the attacks of
9/11. The other is from two Chinese colonels and has been ignored so
far. They wrote a book entitled: Unrestricted Warfare. In “Women
at West Point” W. Edward Chynoweth points out a law passed
by Congress in 1976 that mandated the integration of women into the
service academies. He believes that a feminist Zeitgeist since then
has diverted our military from its primary purpose of defeating an
enemy, and instead forced the military into a useless battle against
human nature. Martin
Harris shows how neighbors and zoning boards can arbitrarily disregard
carefully constructed zoning regulations and procedures in “Zoning
Innovations in Vermont.” In “Weasel
Words and the Kelo Decision” John D’Aloia describes the
efforts of Kansas legislators to craft an amendment that seemingly
limits the government’s ability to take private property—yet the
legislators have still left themselves the means to take property as
they please. Arnold
Beichman reviews The Road to Modernity: The British, French, and
America Enlightenments, by Gertrude Himelfarb, and Robert C.
Whitten reviews The New Militarism: How Americans Are Seduced by
War, by Andrew Bacevich.
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