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Interesting article on parenting from the Minneapolis Star Tribune quoting Strauss and Howe on the generations.

...The world is obsessed with the so-called occupied territories in Palestine, but not from any abstract principle of postbellum equity or worry over civilian deaths. Otherwise un resolutions, European subsidies, and American envoys would have been focused on occupied Tibet or Lebanon, or the killing of tens of thousands of innocents in Rwanda and Darfur. So Palestine is not so much a moral issue as a political lightning rod that involves Arab oil, Arab global terrorism, Arab fundamentalist violence in and beyond the Middle East, and Arab anti-Semitism that finds resonance in Europe. While Ross understands that the Middle East is critical to world peace, he never quite explains why this small strip of land should be — and thus never fully elucidates why diplomats like Jim Baker and Colin Powell essentially renounced the frenetic efforts of their predecessors as vain and counterproductive.

Hanson wonder's at the critical significance of the tiny strip of land called, Israel/Palestine and why it commands the attention it does. What he does not grasp, despite his classical brilliance is the Biblical significance from the world of God.

The Parent Trap

Interesting article on parenting from the Minneapolis Star Tribune quoting Strauss and Howe on the generations. Parents who try and become buddies with their children do them a disservice.

Marriage 'is good for men's health'

But most of us already knew this. Further study confirms conventional wisdom. I would like to see a study comparing the benefits of traditional male/female marriage to gay marriage.

Mideast Morass

A piercing review by Victor Davis Hanson of a tome by diplomat Dennis Ross. The money paragraph:

The world is obsessed with the so-called occupied territories in Palestine, but not from any abstract principle of postbellum equity or worry over civilian deaths. Otherwise un resolutions, European subsidies, and American envoys would have been focused on occupied Tibet or Lebanon, or the killing of tens of thousands of innocents in Rwanda and Darfur. So Palestine is not so much a moral issue as a political lightning rod that involves Arab oil, Arab global terrorism, Arab fundamentalist violence in and beyond the Middle East, and Arab anti-Semitism that finds resonance in Europe. While Ross understands that the Middle East is critical to world peace, he never quite explains why this small strip of land should be — and thus never fully elucidates why diplomats like Jim Baker and Colin Powell essentially renounced the frenetic efforts of their predecessors as vain and counterproductive.

Hanson wonder's at the critical significance of the tiny strip of land called, Israel/Palestine and why it commands the attention it does. What he does not grasp, despite his classical brilliance is the Biblical significance from the world of God.