Thinking about it a bit more... the new 'Twilight'-esque vampires are almost a deliberate reversal of the vampire legend. "Trust the secret masters, they may suck your blood but they're really the good guys". And that's the same mindset as the zombie apocalypse survivalists: the small band of elite versus the uneducated dangerous masses.
I don't like that development one bit, actually. Not one bit.
Too true. The Peggy Noonan article just sticks to the traditional "government bad, market good" dogma that got America and the rest of the world into this mess in the first place. If anything, she accidentally proves her own point even more deeply by showing that the opposition to the current US administration doesn't have a fucking clue either.
Personally, I think the problem is that value has become divorced from reality. Used to be, you could mine some coal, or manufacture a sprocket, and that was value. Now the big money is in squeezing money out of intellectual properties and trying to sell off dodgy debt packages. Its not clear anymore, at least to the layman on whom the economy ultimately depends, what if any value there is here. If you lobby to have the law changed so the same IP makes twice as much profit, that registers as economic growth when measured by GDP, but what value have you created?
Illiterate. And a closet case, too - you must be.
No one gets so quick to the accusation of "fagot" (sic), than does the fellow wishing to be speared like a kabob on Schwarzenegger's knob.
"They don't understand that if they start to tax me so that I'm paying 60%, 55%, I'll stop."
Top marginal tax rates were around 90% during the 1950s, and 50% or higher during most of the 1980s.
The economy, and the nation, survived.
It's time to restore taxation on the aristocrats. Raise the top marginal rates, restore the inheritance tax, and tax capital gains the same as earned income.
Who is John Galt?
He's a fictional character in a sophomoric novel that takes place in a fantasy world with less relevance to our own than Tolkien's Middle Earth.
The Metamorphosis - Kafka. They should read something by him someday. This class is a good excuse. (short)
1984 - Orwell. This has one of the best first pages in English literature. It brings up the subject of torture that has been in the news lately. (long)
Nightfall - Asimov. This is shorter than I, Robot. (short)
A Scanner Darkly - Dick. This has a wonderful anti-drug message. The writing style is bracingly weird. (medium)
Flowers for Algernon - Keyes. This discusses themes of accomplishment, capacity, happiness and loss. (medium)
Cat's Cradle - Vonnegut. This is sexier, shorter and more fun than Slaughterhouse 5. (medium)
Brave New World - Huxley. (long)
Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone - Rowling. This has scholastic themes and is regarded as well written. (long)
Stranger in a Strange Land - Heinlein. This is thought provoking. (long)
Neuromancer - Gibson. This is from the edgy part of the sci-fi genre. It has some racy scenes. (long)
The Sword of Shannara - Brooks. This is a straightforward fantasy novel. (long)
The Hobbit - Tolkien. More fantasy. (long)
Lord Foul's Bane - Donaldson. This is wacky but it does focus on solipsist and humanist themes. (long)
Battlefield Earth - Hubbard. It's a little long but reads fast. One presidential candidate said this was his favorite book. (really long)
Anthem - Rand. This is a short one. (short)
The Dispossessed - Le Guin. This examines socialism. (long)
Neon Genesis Evangelion - Anno. This is manga and may be too expensive or sexy for the classroom. It covertly covers teen issues. (really long if you read them all)
(The kids should've already read something by Bradbury. You don't need to read something else by him. I left out Dune because it strikes me as unoriginal and too long. I think Lovecraft's stuff is depressing. War of the Worlds by Wells is good but no longer relevant. Crichton, Ellison and Card are fun but I think you can live without them. I would only read one fantasy novel. I would pick Lord Foul's Bane because it would make for some hilarious classroom discussions. There is also http://fantasybedtimehour.com/ that analyzes Lord Foul's Bane in minute detail. Here's a list of the top sci-fi books: http://home.austarnet.com.au/petersykes/topscifi/lists_books_rank1.html)
Marriage is the sole cause of divorce.