Omniculture

A Conservative Win for Academic Freedom

April 7, 2011
By
A Conservative Win for Academic Freedom

by Warren Moore One of the better known conservative contrarians in higher education is Mike Adams, a criminology prof at the U of North Carolina — Wilmington. After submitting a promotion dossier that included some of his columns, Adams was denied a promotion and sued, alleging viewpoint and religious discrimination. His suit was originally dismissed, but on appeal, a three-judge panel of the Fourth Circuit ruled unanimously that while the religious discrimination charge was rightly dismissed, academic freedom and First Amendment rights must be considered. According to the Chronicle of Higher Ed: If the university does not appeal, the district court will now have the task of determining whether Mr. Adams’s commentaries were a substantial factor in the university’s decision not to promote him and whether his speech should have been protected because his interest in speaking on matters of public concern outweighed the university’s interests in determining for itself how to best serve the public. Now there may be other perfectly good reasons for denying Adams the promotion — I’m not really familiar with his c.v. It’s also not proven that Adams’s viewpoint and columns (which the Chronicle compares to Ann Coulter) were the reason for denial — as

Read more »

“Postmodernitis”

March 25, 2011
By
“Postmodernitis”

By Mike Gray We live in a world without reliable truths or transcendent possibilities, without epiphanies, without absolute values, without teleology and without durable meanings. Our allegiance is not to a culture, nation or civilization; it is to the macrocosm of the plural. Or so we have been instructed. — David Solway In the Hundred Acre Wood, instead of a meaningful history Christopher, Winnie, and Piglet can only remember and cherish “an endless round of inconsequential neighborly exchanges” which are merely “a product of time and chance.” Bummer. The movement that we call “postmodernism” is so vast and nebulous that it has come to mean just about anything we want it to mean. According to David Kolb in Postmodern Sophistications, the word itself was first used in its current sense by historian Arnold Toynbee in 1946 to refer to the last decades of the nineteenth century when “the great modern synthesis began to break down.” It was subsequently picked up by artists, poets, architects, and critics and applied to the period after World War II. The word has now become a cowcatcher term sweeping all query and objection before it. It serves in the way a phatic interjection in everyday

Read more »

‘Living in the Shadows’? More Like Casting a Very Long One

March 24, 2011
By
‘Living in the Shadows’? More Like Casting a Very Long One

By Mike Gray Political correctness can lead to some amazingly warped situations: Los Angeles Police Department officers manning sobriety checkpoints will no longer, as a matter of department policy, impound cars driven by unlicensed drivers. That is unless the unlicensed driver is a United States citizen or lawful resident, in which case he can say adios to his car for 30 days, as authorized by California law. I can see you out there shaking your heads and saying, “Wait a minute . . . .”  Yes, you read it correctly: Two drivers are stopped at a sobriety checkpoint in Los Angeles and both are found to be sober, but lacking a driver’s license. The first, a U.S. citizen, receives a citation and stands by and watches as his car is towed away to the impound yard, where it will remain for a month so as to impress upon him that driving is a privilege, not a right, and that the people of the state of California extend that privilege only to those who have demonstrated some minimal level of proficiency as signified by possession of a driver’s license. The second unlicensed driver, an illegal immigrant from, let’s just say Mexico,

Read more »

‘Midsomer Murders: It’s Escapist, Not Racist’—spiked

March 23, 2011
By
‘Midsomer Murders: It’s Escapist, Not Racist’—spiked

The long-running UK mystery-crime series Midsomer Murders (shown on U.S. TV for several years and still available on DVD) was immensely popular and widely admired by fans and critics alike. The show’s producer got in a good deal of trouble recently, however, for saying that MM’s avoidance of race- and sexual-behavior-based characters and story lines was part of its appeal. As MM producer Brian True-May noted, the show’s refusal to shoehorn such elements into its stories made sense because

Read more »

Sheen’s Decline Shows Need for Shared Moral Code

February 25, 2011
By
Sheen’s Decline Shows Need for Shared Moral Code

Actor Charlie Sheen represents the classic unhinged contemporary celebrity whose talent and/or popularity insulate him from the consequences of his actions until the bad habits thus encouraged finally push him or her into disaster. Thus it is with Sheen, whose drug and alcohol abuse, history of mistreatment of his wife and consequent divorce, use of prostitutes, and the like made him a sad example of celebrity self-indulgence and whose latest tirade resulted in the suspension of production of his popular TV show, Two and a Half Men. Sheen was a likable person whose raffish behavior eventually imposed costs too high for his employers to bear. It is natural for adolescents to crave freedom from all constraints and rebel against perfectly reasonable obstacles to their whims. (This, in my view, is the impulse behind the transvaluation of all values, of which Nietzsche and which progressivism has disastrously implemented in the years since the end of World War II.) It is unwise for a society to indulge people in such behavior, as the consequences are awful both for the society and for the individual involved. The idiotic vulgarity and foolish values promulgated by much of the culture show that to be true

Read more »

Book Review: ‘The Flipside of Feminism’

February 25, 2011
By
Book Review: ‘The Flipside of Feminism’

By Mike Gray The Flipside of Feminism: What Conservative Women Know—And Men Can’t Say — by Suzanne Venker and Phyllis Schlafly — WND Books — Hardcover — 2011 — ISBN 978-193507127-3 — 226 pages. . . . no society can thrive—or survive—when half its members believe they’re oppressed and the other half are told there’s no reason for them to exist. In The Flipside of Feminism, Suzanne Venker and Phyllis Schlafly document how for the last half century or so America’s women have been sold a bill of goods by the Liberal-Progressives. The Lib-Progs devised and marketed—and through a compliant media industry continue to market—the demonstrably false idea that women can have it all, that is, raise healthy, well-adjusted children and enjoy a full-time career outside the home at the same time. The hard and un-Progressive truth is that women can have it all, but not all at the same time. Biology and social inertia dictate that women, if they want to have those things, must achieve them sequentially: children when they’re young and outside careers when the kids are mature enough to handle being on their own most of the time. Venker and Schlafly believe

Read more »

Clooney Entertains with Classic ‘Humble Brag’

February 24, 2011
By
Clooney Entertains with Classic ‘Humble Brag’

Here’s a classic “humble brag” for you. What’s a humble brag, you ask? It’s a clever observation from the most recent episode of NCIS: Los Angeles, designating when a person compliments him- or herself by pretending to complain of a difficulty. The actor-filmmaker-politico-egomaniac George Clooney has just provided us with a classic, hilarious example of a humble brag in his interview with Newsweek magazine (h/t to USA Today), in explaining why he won’t run for political office: “I didn’t live my life in the right way for politics, you know,” he says. “I f–ed too many chicks and did too many drugs, and that’s the truth.” A smart campaigner, he believes, “would start from the beginning by saying, ‘I did it all. I drank the bong water. Now let’s talk about issues.’ That’s gonna be my campaign slogan: ‘I drank the bong water.’?” Perfect. By saying, “Poor me! I’ve lived such a thrilling, hedonistic, perversely enviable  life that I just don’t know whether people will take me seriously as a statesman, which of course is what I really merit,” Clooney gets to brag about his cosmic coolness and superiority while pretending to be plagued with troubles like the rest of

Read more »

Whose Rhetoric Is Dangerous, Again?

February 23, 2011
By
Whose Rhetoric Is Dangerous, Again?

Progressives tweet their wishes for assassination of Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, a Republican:

Read more »

Is the West Committing Slow-motion Suicide?

February 4, 2011
By
Is the West Committing Slow-motion Suicide?

By Mike Gray Matt Patterson, at Pajamas Media, thinks “n existential civil war and untenable socio-economic policies combined in the 20th century to exhaust and bankrupt the West economically, creatively, and morally. What this slow civilizational suicide means for the average Western citizen is a future that will be — if present trends continue — less free, less prosperous, and less stable”: At the dawn of the second decade of the 21st century . . . the edifice of Western civilization teeters precariously on shaken foundations. The symptoms of cultural decay — plunging birth rates, empty churches, economic instability — rage like an untreated fever. Once-conquered peoples of the Far East are now our creditors. The colonization of space has been abandoned. The global financial system created and underwritten by the West now appears a fragile ecosystem that few can understand and fewer can predict; the prosperity it once seemed to guarantee now appears frighteningly evanescent. In retrospect, historians will recognize the 20th century as the era in which the West began to consume itself from within. The process was twofold . . . . Patterson isn’t steeped in doom and gloom, however, hoping vaguely for another Western Renaissance. But

Read more »

Interview: Mark Goldblatt, Author of ‘Sloth’

January 26, 2011
By
Interview: Mark Goldblatt, Author of ‘Sloth’

Larry Kaufmann interviews Mark Goldblatt about his novel Sloth, a fascinating, genre-bending book that blends comedy, detection, identity theft, perverse romance, and other elements in a Nabokovian, postmodern love(ish) story that satirizes our relativistic, postmodern, media-obsessed society of today. Click here to listen.

Read more »

Don Kirshner, RIP

January 19, 2011
By
Don Kirshner, RIP

Music impresario Don Kirshner, dead at 76, may not be remembered best for catapulting Kansas to stardom in the 1970s, nor for launching the career of the Monkees and launching the animated chart-toppers The Archies in the 1960s. Those accomplishments – even to the most die-hard, discriminating popular music critics – should be enough for us to mourn his passing today.

Read more »

Politicization of Arizona Mass Murder Shows Progressive Mentality at Work

January 17, 2011
By
Politicization of Arizona Mass Murder Shows Progressive Mentality at Work

The mass murder at Rep. Gabrielle Giffords’s meet-up with her Arizona constituents just over a week ago was immediately politicized by progressive politicians and media figures. That’s the way things are done when progressives have any power to reach the public: everything is political. It was in fact politics as usual for the progressive borg. That way of doing things is derived from the foundations of the progressive mentality, which assumes that all things should be made fully subject to the rule of experts. In the present case, an atrocity was used as the pretext for arguing that progressives should be given even greater and more explicit control over what people can say in public. That’s the reality of what happened on that weekend and throughout the week. The process began, tellingly, with the New York Times, the newspaper of record among the nation’s progressives. It sets the agenda for the nation’s legacy media, deciding what will be considered news and what angle the coverage should take. Less than two hours after the news broke, Times columnist Paul Krugman did the dirty work by asserting that “this was political.” You know that Republicans will yell about the evils of partisanship

Read more »


"Culture is the expression of the guiding philosophy of the day."—Murray Rothbard

Subscribe to The American Culture.

 

February 2012
S M T W T F S
« Jan    
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
26272829  

Archive

Twitter Feed!

Follow the American Culture and S. T. Karnick on Twitter! Send message "follow stkarnick1" to 40404 on your cell phone or go to twitter.com.

Packages Seo