Author Archive for Ken Connor

Kenneth L. Connor is the Chairman of the Center for a Just Society, 1220 L St. NW, Suite 100-371, Washington, DC 20005. Email: info@centerforajustsociety.org and website: http://www.centerforajustsociety.org.

Exchanging Liberty for Tyranny
0

Exchanging Liberty for Tyranny

by

“The only foundation for .  .  . a republic is to be laid in Religion. Without this there can be no virtue, and without virtue there can be no liberty, and liberty is the object and life of all republican governments.” Benjamin Rush Conservative Christians like myself love quotes like this, and the nice thing […]

The Lost Art of Education
2

The Lost Art of Education

by

When American parents send their children off to college, the deluge of emotion can be overwhelming. No matter how much time and money you spent preparing yourself for this most pivotal transition in the life of your child, you always feel as though you could have done more. Will they succeed? Will they be safe? […]

<i>Vive La France</i>: It's About the Children
0

Vive La France: It’s About the Children

by

When we gaze across the pond at our European cousins, the general assumption is that we’re looking at our future. From food and fashion to politics and culture, Europe is on the cutting edge – the avant garde. Depending on your ideological sympathies, this is either seen as a good thing or a bad thing. […]

<i>Father</i>: Feminism's Four Letter Word
2

Father: Feminism’s Four Letter Word

by

In a recent Washington Post article, “The New F-Word: Father,” Kathleen Parker discusses a recent study on household income dynamics by the Pew Research Center which shows that 40 percent of U.S. households with children under 18 are run by women who are either the primary or sole breadwinner. Parker recognizes that this data is […]

Resisting the Tide of Secularism
0

Resisting the Tide of Secularism

by

“What we’re seeing today is a secular liberalism that wants to expand the prohibition of establishment to silence articulate religious voices and disenfranchise religiously motivated voters, and at the same time to narrow the scope of free exercise so that the new secular morality can reign over American society unimpeded.”?? So said First Things editor […]

Collusion and Corruption at the IRS
11

Collusion and Corruption at the IRS

by

They say there are only two sure things in life: death and taxes. Try as we might, it’s virtually impossible to escape the clutches of the Grim Reaper or the Tax Man. Both will get you eventually. And as anyone who has been through an IRS audit or suffered a tax penalty can attest, the […]

What's Wrong with Crony Capitalism
0

What’s Wrong with Crony Capitalism

by

Thanks to a renewed interest in the works of Ayn Rand and high-profile figures like John Stossel, Glenn Beck, and Rand Paul, libertarianism is enjoying a moment in the political sun. And just like America’s two major parties, libertarians can often be blind to faulty logic and flaws within their own ideology. Timothy P. Carney […]

Want to Know How Washington Really Works?
0

Want to Know How Washington Really Works?

by

“You see, boys forget what their country means by just reading The Land of the Free in history books. Then they get to be men they forget even more. Liberty’s too precious a thing to be buried in books . . . . Men should hold it up in front of them every single day […]

An Abortion Ghoul's Chamber of Horrors
0

An Abortion Ghoul’s Chamber of Horrors

by

Last week, I wrote a column entitled “Brutality in the Brave New World” discussing an appalling movement within the scientific community in which researchers are exploring the “therapeutic” potential of the eggs of aborted baby girls. In a similar vein, a bioethicist writing for the Huffington Post in 2009 famously suggested that pregnant women wanting […]

Brutality in a Brave New World
6

Brutality in a Brave New World

by

In his seminal work, Nichomachean Ethics, the philosopher Aristotle begins his meditation on the subject of morality and the ultimate end of human life with an observation that certain first principles of ethics are self-evident to a person who has been raised up in a virtuous manner. A good man simply “knows” certain things to […]

Discounting Parents' Rights
0

Discounting Parents’ Rights

by

For people of faith in America, the Obama administration’s birth control mandate represents an unprecedented assault on religious conscience. It seems that the President and his surrogates have little appreciation for the role that faith plays in the lives of many Americans, and even less respect for the Constitution’s protection of religious liberty. As if […]

Don't Wait 'til It's Too Late to Decide
1

Don’t Wait ’til It’s Too Late to Decide

by

This past week, health care journalist Charles Ornstein wrote a compelling piece for the Washington Post detailing his personal experience with heart-wrenching end-of-life medical decisions.  Ornstein’s story of his mother’s death highlights the complexity of this little-discussed topic, and should serve as a wakeup call to every American family: End-of-life issues should not be avoided […]

Defending the Right to Self-Defense
1

Defending the Right to Self-Defense

by

The recent spate of mass shootings has prompted President Obama and his allies in Congress to pursue new gun control laws with special urgency.  Mr. Obama is correct in sensing that the American people are ready for serious action on this issue, but he is mistaken in thinking that they are in agreement with him […]

Progressives Embrace Moral and Medical Schizophrenia
0

Progressives Embrace Moral and Medical Schizophrenia

by

“Your freedom is likely to be someone else’s harm.” So says bioethicist Daniel Callahan of the Hastings Center, responding to the recent controversy over provisions in Obamacare that penalize smokers.   In the era of the Bloomberg ban on Big Gulps, the proper role, if any, that government should have in the lifestyle decisions of […]

A Call to Conscience
2

A Call to Conscience

by

“Theological courage calls the inner-man to ignore his buckling knees and take theologically driven stances that, while potentially controversial, are righteous in nature.”  So write Owen Strachen and Andrew Walker in a recent article discussing Hobby Lobby’s stance against Obamacare’s onerous trampling of religious liberty.   The idea of martyrdom, be it physical, social, or […]

Free to Choose?
0

Free to Choose?

by

Americans’ affirmation of the “right to choose” is a feature of our national identity.  No matter where you go or what you’re doing, chances are you are confronted with a plethora of choices.  Go to the supermarket and you are confronted with a dizzying array of options for each and every product you wish to […]

Killing Them Softly?
1

Killing Them Softly?

by

During the months leading up to the passage of Obamacare, Sarah Palin was mocked and excoriated for her use of the term “death panels” to describe the comparative effectiveness approach embraced by architects of the legislation.  Granted, the phrase sounds a bit hyperbolic, and downright macabre.  Who could possibly be in favor of faceless bureaucrats […]

Restoring the Foundations of Civil Society
0

Restoring the Foundations of Civil Society

by

In the wake of President Obama’s decisive reelection, the GOP is engaged in some serious soul-searching.  Pundits on the Right and Left are cautioning Republicans that their party is facing extinction unless some major changes are made.  They maintain it’s evolve or die for the GOP.  The question is, how much can an institution change […]

Vote Your Vision
1

Vote Your Vision

by

President Obama has said many times that this election represents a choice between two very different visions for America.  Do we want to go back to the same policies that got us in so much trouble in the first place or do we want a fresh start for America, a new vision leading to a […]

The Silence of American Feminists is Deafening
0

The Silence of American Feminists is Deafening

by

Unless you’ve been living under the rock for the past month or so, you’ve probably noticed that the campaign season has kicked into overdrive.  One of the critical voting blocks being targeted by Democrats are women.  The airwaves are clogged and mailboxes stuffed with the message that the crusty old white men who comprise the […]

Infertility and Selective Abortion: Steering a Course Between Scylla and Charybdis
1

Infertility and Selective Abortion: Steering a Course Between Scylla and Charybdis

by

A lot of people, conservatives in particular, tend to idealize the past.  We like to wax lyrical about simpler times, the “good old days.”  Of course, if we are honest we have to admit that those good old days weren’t always so great.  The passage of time and progress of society have brought many blessings […]

Diminishing the Disabled
0

Diminishing the Disabled

by

The results of a recent survey of parents of children with disabilities ran cross-grain to the mentality that characterizes our society’s culture of death.  Published in the medical journal Pediatrics, the survey included parents of 272 children suffering from the extreme genetic conditions Trisomy 13 and Trisomy 18—conditions where a child is born with an extra 13 […]

Food Stamps: Let's Provide a Safety Net, Not a Mattress
0

Food Stamps: Let’s Provide a Safety Net, Not a Mattress

by

In everything I did, I showed you that by this kind of hard work we must help the weak, remembering the words the Lord Jesus himself said, “It is more blessed to give than to receive.” -Acts 20:35 (NIV) Government provision of food stamps has become the second-largest welfare program in the country and is […]

<em>Boomsday</em>: Coming to a Theater Near You
0

Boomsday: Coming to a Theater Near You

by

In his 2007 book Boomsday, Christopher Buckley writes of a fictional future where an overwhelming number of elderly baby boomers are given tax incentives to end their lives early.  With recent developments out of Switzerland, Buckley’s tongue-in-cheek novel may prove all-too-prescient. The Swiss canton of Vaud just passed a law mandating that doctors in hospitals and nursing homes provide […]