Military Times has a look at the initial design for the Global War on Terrorism Memorial.
It's sort of mind-bogglingly bad.
[But it might make a suitable skate-boarding park.]
Commentary by Michael Wade, consultant, speaker, and author of "Pilate's Magician."
Military Times has a look at the initial design for the Global War on Terrorism Memorial.
It's sort of mind-bogglingly bad.
[But it might make a suitable skate-boarding park.]
City Journal: Wilfred M. McClay on the significance of the Declaration of Independence. An excerpt:
We are thinking a lot about remembrance, with the 250th anniversary of American independence approaching. How, in this contentious time, should we remember this event? How should we observe the occasion? Do such things really matter?
The last question is the easiest to answer. Yes, they matter, because looking forward necessarily entails looking backward. The two vistas are symbiotically connected in the human soul. Edmund Burke captured this truth when he famously remarked: “People will not look forward to posterity, who never look backward to their ancestors.” We must connect with both if we are to have a stake in either. We are better able to imagine, and work toward, a future for our children when we remember, with gratitude, that we ourselves are the embodiment of our predecessors’ tomorrows.
In 1815, there was an intriguing editorial shift as Napoleon returned to France following his exile on Elba.
Le Moniteur Universel, which was the official government newspaper, reported:
In the voting booths, it's a historic realignment. For the first time in modern history, anti-system parties are simultaneously leading in the three major economies of Europe. Reform is crushing everything in the UK with a Starmer at -61 net popularity. The AfD ahead of the CDU. The RN higher than ever. Italy governed. Austria, Portugal, the Netherlands tipping. Trump reelected. Milei turning Argentina around live.
I have just learned that today, June 10, is designated not as Father's Day but as:
National Black Cow Day