Quote of the Day

Posted By on May 10, 2004 at 1:12 am

Nearly 25 years after Iran fell to the rule of the mullahs, Victor Davis Hanson, writing in The Wages of Appeasement — How Jimmy Carter and academic multiculturalists helped bring us Sept. 11 at OpinionJournal.com, draws upon ancient history to give us a warning:

As long ago as the fourth century B.C., Demosthenes warned how complacency and self-delusion among an affluent and free Athenian people allowed a Macedonian thug like Philip II to end some four centuries of Greek liberty–and in a mere 20 years of creeping aggrandizement down the Greek peninsula. Thereafter, these historical lessons should have been clear to citizens of any liberal society: We must neither presume that comfort and security are our birthrights and are guaranteed without constant sacrifice and vigilance, nor expect that peoples outside the purview of bourgeois liberalism share our commitment to reason, tolerance and enlightened self-interest.

“Paging Mr. Santayana, George Santayana, please come to the white courtesy telephone….”

Reading: Future Tense

Posted By on May 9, 2004 at 4:35 pm

I confess: I am a bibliophile.
I read a lot. Constantly. If I’m not actively typing something on the computer, I’m reading something online. If I’m not doing work of some sort, or in front of the computer, I have a book in my hands.
I read while I’m waiting for the microwave to finish cooking something. I read while I’m stirring something on the stove. I read while taking a walk. I read during meals.
I can’t even sit down in front of the TV without having a book handy — if I’m not multitasking between the TV and a book, then at a minimum, I’ll read during the commercials.
Yes, I read in the bathroom; I’d read in the shower if I could.

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