Why Hebrew?, Part Three: Hebrew Competes With Greek

Read Part One Here Read Part Two Here Competing Features Now, consider possible ways in which Hebrew will compete with the Greek heritage, and vie for the dominant eye. For some things there cannot be two masters; one, and only one, must be granted superiority. In The Republic, Plato identified three classes of citizens in...

Does Anybody Understand This Stuff?, Part One: Deflation

  Read Part Two Here This is one of several blogs in a series called Does Anybody Understand this stuff?, concerning economics and our future. There is no way to honor the blogging rule of 600 word posts when we are talking about the economy, so I will try to keep them...

People Who Live at the End of Dirt Roads: Monte and Laura Bledsoe – Quail Hollow Farm, CSA

Six years ago one of my former mentees decided to try growing vegetables on a tiny patch of ground.  She thought, “what a nice little hobby I will create for myself.”  Her vision was to grow and provide a little food for a few other families. She was not willing to...

Why Hebrew?: Part One

Contributing Author - James Malmstrom, Monticello College Faculty CHOMRONG VILLAGE, Nepal - 2011 – I was sitting in the courtyard of Chomrong Cottage, a charming lodge and the second stop of a 10-day trek into the Annapurna mountain range. The towering snow-capped Himalayan peaks in the distance guarded the gateway to our final destination, a...

Montesquieu: Luminary of the Enlightenment

 (Please excuse any errors.  I am writing on the fly from New York and time is limited). Marcus Tullius Cicero Cicero said, "To be ignorant of what occurred before you were born is to remain always a child." To paraphrase, he who only knows his own generation is an unwitting slave to those who have a knowledge of the...

What Sort Of Despotism Democratic Nations Have To Fear

The debate of the Federalists and the Anti-federalists is not our debate.  Their argument was centered on how to create a system that maintained the strength of sovereign states and create a strong, independent general government.  We now have the opposite, weak quasi-sovereign states with a run away all-powerful federal...

The Courage of Washington

George Washington was not a great president.  He was an average farmer and a loyal but solitary if dispassionate husband and neighbor. When it came to people and relationships, public speaking, pressing the flesh, and gushing, Mr. Washington had a lot of room for improvement. It’s a good thing Washington’s mission...

Article V: A Potential Path to Restoring State Sovereignty, Citizen Responsibility and the Original Intent of the Founders

Today there are two strongly promoted opinions regarding the advantages and disadvantages of a Constitutional Convention that could be activated by the application of at least 34 of the several states as outlined in Article V of the U.S. Constitution. One purports that such a move would likely put the nation...

Fundamental Principles, Individual Rights, and Free Government: Do Utahns Remember How to Be Free?

The idea of jealously guarding freedom seems to be slipping quickly from the grasp of the average Utahn and American. Over the past year I have spent significant time in New York, California, and Utah with visits to Arizona, Nevada and Kentucky. I get a feeling that the average American is becoming...