Introduction: So David French has written on the Kyle Rittenhouse situation here. His central concern is that he wants Christians to do a better job respecting the social compact we have here in America, and is concerned that those Christians who have rallied to the support of Kyle Rittenhouse are failing in this important duty. …
The Atmosphere Was Electric, In Other Words
“The pack reminded Stephanie, who had just managed to squeeze in the side door, of a crowded dog pound, with numerous mongrels quivering with excitement, waiting for the county official to throw some meat over the fence.”
Ride, Sally, Ride, p. 128
Blog and Mailbag
Letter to the Editor: It looks like Amazon removed 'Free Speech Apocalypse'. Is that correct? Garrett -- Doug responds: Garrett, that would appear to be the case. Anyone ...
And Some People Hate That
“Ace was a predator, a dangerous man, one whose toxic masculinity just seeped out of him and puddled on the floor.”
Ride, Sally, Ride, p. 127
On Not Accepting Stolen Elections
Introduction: I think it is fair to say that the political and cultural condition of our country can best be described as "inflamed." And in this inflamed condition, we are coming up on a presidential ...
Passive Aggressive Ambulance Chasing
“He wasn’t an ambulance chaser because the ambulances would just drive by the billboard. He didn’t need to chase anything. The billboard was stationary.”
Ride, Sally, Ride, p. 127
How the Judicial Reform Movement Began

An Ornate Card, in Other Words
“His business card looked like the invitation to a coming out party for a Houston debutante in the early 1950’s.”
Ride, Sally, Ride, p. 126
Book of the Month/September 2020
This book is a sweeping treatment of church history by Tom Holland, who might best be called a sympathetic unbeliever. What would a church history look like if written by an atheist who was willing to give the influence of Christianity a fair shake? This book provides an answer to that question. The subtitle is …
Epistemologically Homeless Bums
“I decided, back in high school, that I wanted nothing more than to be intellectually honest. I made that decision after two semesters with Mr. Satler in sociology—he affected me like looking at the winos downtown could make someone want to be really careful with alcohol.”
Ride, Sally, Ride, p. 120