Kansas State Of Mind
My good friend and podcasting partner Eric Teetsel is getting married this weekend to a bonnie lass named Abby.
I am in Topeka, KS until Sunday and will not be posting much at the old blog. However, if you want to stay up to date on my travels and trials, follow me on Twitter (@rjmoeller). Oh, and don't worry: there is a Chipotle in Topeka. Phew!
GK Day: New Years Resolutions
By: Jacqueline Otto, Guest Contributor
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“The paradox of courage is that one must be a little careless of life even in order to keep it.” – G.K. Chesterton 
I am not entirely sure where I first ran across this Chesterton-ism, but it was one I had scribbled on a post-it note and stuck to my desktop monitor many years ago. As times modernized, the quote was transferred from a post-it note to a Facebook quote and eventually a tweet which I favorited. As a result, this quote grew with me over the last few years without even knowing the significance of the author. In college I took a literature course on the Inklings, which lead me into a kind of a C.S. Lewis/G.K Chesterton Renaissance. A surprise to me, when I realized that Chesterton’s words of wisdom had already been influencing my life.
Coming into this New Year, it’s time to take stock of our lives and make goals. This nugget of Chestonian wisdom is one that I remember at New Years.
Society has a way of predetermining paths for us to take. There is a lot of pressure in the world, even from well-intentioned family members, for young people to go to this college, or major in this subject, or go to the law school that is their parent’s alma mater.
Many people will abdicate to society the authority to make decisions. These people find themselves with a degree they don’t want and debt they don’t need. They find themselves living somewhere they don’t like, married to someone they don’t love, and in a career that is leading them no where but to their psychiatrist’s couch.
The paradox to which Chesterton is referring is that your life will be lived by others if you don’t make the decisions necessary to keep possession of it. What you may need to do will seem risky if it goes against what your family, or your friends, or your culture tells you to do. But America is a country of risk-takers. Christianity is a faith of those who listen to their God before they listen to anyone else.
If you find yourself out of step with the pre-determined life that other are taking, then you will find yourself in good company. When making New Years resolutions for 2012, remember to be courageous and take risks. You won’t reach your God-given potential if you let society live your life.
James Delingpole: Not A Narnia Character’s Name
If you're on the Right, you need to familiarize yourself with the work of columnist James Delingpole. He is British and writes for The Daily Telegraph in London. I'll let Uncommon Knowledge's Peter Robinson fill you in on the rest.
Watch this:
Fascinating guy. We should be paying attention to what's happening in England and Europe. Seriously.
Merry Christmas From Ronald (Not McDonald)
President Reagan sums up how I feel about the Christmas season in this brief national address he delivered in 1981:
For more on the TRUE meaning of Christmas, here's Pastor John Piper:
God bless you, your family, and the United States of America!
The Gang Tackles ‘Rights’
The latest episode of The R.J. Moeller Show podcast opens with a quick review of R.J.'s viewing of the 50th Anniversary Edition of Ben-Hur on the big screen. The classic film was re-mastered and re-released this December and shown in select theaters around the country.
There were plenty of news stories to discuss, and The Gang offers up their thoughts on the following headlines:
- Crazy man in L.A. shoots at strangers due to "bad breakup"
- Wall Street Journal weighs in on Tebow-mania
- North Korea threatens retaliation over Christmas lights
In the second segment, R.J. analyzes Sec. of State Hillary Clinton's recent speech at an International Human Rights Day conference in which Clinton made the outrageous claim that "religious objections" to homosexuality shouldn't enter into any political discussions around the globe. The source of "natural rights" is considered.
R.J. also recounts some contentious Facebook discussions he engaged in with liberal Christians after posting the Clinton video earlier in the week.
The gang is back and in rare form!
You can stream the episode below, or find The R.J. Moeller Show on your iTunes!
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Kim Jong, The Witch Is Dead
One of the worst humans to grace the planet in the past half-century, North Korean dictator Kim Jong-Il, has died. I'm not qualified to parse the man's "career" or full impact on geo-political matters since taking power in the early 1990's, but what I do know about Jong-Il and his Communist Party's ideology can be nicely summed up in one photo:
This is the satellite photo that the US State Department uses in all of its briefings of North Korea . The lighted area closer to the bottom of the picture is South Korea. The almost entirely black region just above that is North Korea.
In the Marxist utopia of North Korea, one originally propped up by the USSR and Mao's China, there is no industry, no innovation, starving people, and Orwellian top-down control of every aspect of society. It is a country that threatens its southern neighbor with military retaliation...for putting Christmas lights up too close to their mutual border. (This is a real story, which you can read here.)
In the free South, Koreans are growing, thriving, investing, inventing and, oh, I don't know...eating! One half of the Korean peninsula has electricity, one does not. One half is free to worship God the way they see fit, and one is not. One half is insanely aggressive with its neighbors and lords its rogue nuclear program over the heads of the entire hemisphere, and one is a nation that just wants to provide its people with security to live their lives as they see fit.
Kim Jong-Il didn't introduce Communism to the world, or even to his country, and I'm sure many far-Left proponents would argue, "He doesn't represent us. Our collectivist ideology will work if given the proper try." Perhaps there is some truth to that, but generally speaking, what I believe is this: the bigger the government, the smaller the citizen. Dennis Prager has articulated this premise well in a YouTube video:
State-controlled economies and societies are not simply bad ideas - I believe they are moral evils. Conversely, limited government and personal liberty (expressed in a combination of personal responsibility and voluntary civic duty) are moral goods.
The death of Kim Jong will make little difference if his heir employs the same wicked ideology and tactics. Still, I'm glad he's gone.
Ken Green and Eric Teetsel
The newest episode of The RJ Moeller Show welcomes American Enterprise Institute's Kenneth P. Green to the podcast for an in-depth interview and features a lively conversation with Values and Capitalism's own, Eric Teetsel.
An environmental scientist by training, Ken Green focuses on policy and regulations
involving energy and environmental health. He is a prolific writer of policy studies and articles, blogs regularly at AEI’s Enterprise Blog, and is a monthly contributor to AEI’s web magazine, The American. Ken speaks frequently to the public and in the media, and has testified before regulatory and legislative bodies at local, state, and federal levels. He is also the author of a recent book entitled Abundant Engergy, in which Green provides a brief history of our reliance on different sources of energy, explores the viability of both current and potential future sources, and offers a vision for the task of fueling human prosperity in the 21st century.
You can follow Ken on Twitter at @KennethPGreen.
During our time with Eric Teetsel, this 1992 Wall Street Journal Op-Ed from the pen of former Senator George McGover (D-SD) is dissected and discussed. The liberal Democrat who ran for president against Richard Nixon in 1972 started his own small business after leaving Congress and learned just how cumbersome many of the tax and regulatory policies he had supported while in office truly were to the American entrepreneur.
Stream this episode below, or find us on your iTunes!
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Hitch Is Dead
By: R.J. Moeller
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As most of you already have heard, Christopher Hitchens, the renowned British journalist/atheist/author, died of pneumonia Thursday night at a hospital in Houston, TX. Mr. Hitchens had been battling cancer of the esophagus for more than a year now. He went from looking like this:
...to this (and in a relatively short amount of time):
When I heard the news late Thursday night, I was listening to a local radio station while driving home from seeing a very stupid movie (the new Mission Impossible) and instantly my mood went from silly anger about Tom Cruise's sub-par film to true, genuine sadness for the family of Mr. Hitchens. Chris' brother, Peter, is actually an outspoken Evangelical Christian and talented writer in his own right. I thought of the numbing pain a Believer must feel when a sibling or parent who does not share their faith passes away. I thought about the the fact that if the Bible is indeed true, and Christopher did not change his mind about Jesus Christ before succumbing to his illness, then he is in Hell right now. There is no way around it: this is a tough pill for anyone to swallow.
Christianity is often attacked for supposedly being "callous" with its "fire-and-brimstone" teachings on eternal punishment for those who reject God in this life. Perhaps some of those charges are true. Perhaps many are not. What I do know is this: It is important for all of us to come face-to-face with the implications of the things we say we believe in, and for me, last night, hearing about the death of Christopher Hitchens, was yet another one of those moments.
I honestly never hated "Hitch" (as he was known to his friends). In fact, I adored his writing style and prose. He was a complex man and a supremely talented communicator. His columns were a delight to read and I re-posted some of them on this very site over the past 4 years. I don't wish to run down his entire biography here and now, so for more on that I would recommend this review of his autobiography Hitch-22 at National Review Online ("His Own Drum") from last year. The guy had an incredible life and for all intents and purposes, practiced what he preached. In a strange way, despite his militant atheism and predominantly liberal political views, I respected that fact.
I respect consistency, probably because of how inconsistent I know I am in my daily life.
Hitchens hated religion, hated the idea of a Higher Power, and was unrelenting in his critique of all religious faith. He wrote a famous book a few years back entitled God Is Not Great: How Religion Poisons Everything.
Those are, in my opinion, unnecessarily strong words to describe something more than 95% of all humans who have ever lived have practiced. Belief in some sort of Higher Power is as natural as breathing. Even the suffering we see screams of an "evil" that can't adequately be described in humanistic, secular terms.
Religion is not the problem. Bad values and a distorted worldview are. Everyone believes in something. Even atheists like Hitchens do not want anarchy, and if you are to avoid anarchy, people must have something to believe in. We need a right and wrong. Atheists look at that and say, "See, it's just an evolutionary defense mechanism that people form religions...it's all about controlling the masses." Notice that they do not say, "So let's abolish all institutions and live like feral pigs." They instead say, "I know a better way for people to live and will now work to see it implemented." Christopher Hitchens had a "moral code" and set of values he lived by, he simply thought it superior to the Judeo-Christian traditions and teachings that have largely defined the Western culture he was a benefactor of. But he still believed in something.
As Bob Dylan sang, "You gotta' serve somebody."
I'm not saying that Chrisopher Hitchens did not understand this. I truly think he did. My real problem with Hitchens' writings on religion (and the writings of those like him through the ages) is not that he hated Christianity, but is the trickle-down secularism it produces in the hearts and minds of others (most notably, young people). Because so much of the mainstream media and so many members of modern academia agree with his worldview, Hitchens was able to reach millions of impressionable young minds with a biased message that passed itself off as an un-biased - scientific even! - appraisal of the natural world. Meanwhile, stuffy old Christians are perpetually framed as those "world is flat", out-of-touch, close-minded bigots whose time has passed. Of course many brilliant defenders of theism (i.e. William Lane Craig, Jay Richards, etc.) have challenged and debated men like Hitchens, but never are those men of faith given the same prominence and respect in the culture at-large as Hitchens, Dawkins, and Sam Harris are.
But I'm not here today to feed you nothing but sour grapes. As I've already stated, Christopher Hitchens was a phenomenal talent and man of conviction (however wrong those convictions might have been). He was willing to anger liberals with his support for unpopular positions like the War on Terror and invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan. He was unafraid of what either side had to say about him. Hitchens was even willing to take on the sacred cow of late-night fake-news programming hosted by the likes of Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert.
He was witty, engaging, and mesmerizing when you got the chance to see him interviewed on TV or YouTube clips.
I recommend this one to you:
In closing: I'm sorry he's gone. My thoughts and prayers are with his family. My deepest hope is that he called out to his Maker before the end.
You may be an ambassador to England or France
You may like to gamble, you might like to dance
You may be the heavyweight champion of the world
You may be a socialite with a long string of pearls.But you're gonna have to serve somebody, yes indeed
You're gonna have to serve somebody,
It may be the devil or it may be the Lord
But you're gonna have to serve somebody.
AEI on PBS News Hour: Income Inequality and Happiness
Staffers from the American Enterprise Institute - as well as AEI's president, Arthur C. Brooks - were featured on the PBS News Hour this week. For those of you who don't know, I write and host a podcast for AEI and their "Values and Capitalism" project.
The topic of the segment on PBS was "Happiness and Inequality" and the network's correspondent filed a report about the significant gap between liberals and conservatives when it comes to their levels of personal happiness and contentment.
I'm proud to be associated with AEI, and proud to be a conservative.
Phil Levy and Seth Cassel
The start of this newest episode of The RJ Moeller Show finds Mr. Moeller finishing out his conversation with entrepreneur Seth Cassel. (For the first half of this interview, check out our last episode here.)
Seth is the manager for musicians such as Andrew Belle, and runs a slew of other companies from his home in Miami, FL. He's one of the most interesting and hard-working guys you'll ever meet, and we know you'll enjoy the conclusion of RJ's chat with Seth.
Following the break, RJ welcomes AEI's own, Phil Levy.
Dr. Levy is an economist by training, received his doctorate from Stanford University, taught at Yale University, and served in high-level positions during the presidency of George W. Bush. Currently a "Resident Scholar" at the American Enterprise Institute, Dr. Levy is the author of the recent book, "Swap: How Trade Works," a brief, practical volume covering the principles of specialization, comparative advantage, deficits, supply chains, labor and environmental standards, trade with the developing world, and much, much more. During the course of the interview, Dr. Levy answered questions on everything from trade deficits with China to Michigan Wolverine football.
If you like what you hear, you can follow Phil Levy on Twitter here.
Don't forget that you can not only stream this episode by clicking the "Play" button on the application below, we're also on iTunes!
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