The People’s Advocate
We understand little about ourselves and each other. We have few thinkers and we have a very few leaders that are thinkers. We need to know the motives of their actions along with the business people’s motives behind the economic meltdown. The necessary policing wasn’t done.
What is Modernism?
An introduction to the concept of modernism and the principal features of it that are usually included in a definition.
What is The Third Way?
An introduction to the political concept of the third way and its implications?
The People’s Hardware
The working parts of a country and its people. When people make things, they need to be repaired from time to time.
On Ideologies – are We Settling for Mediocrity?
An article on the many debates and stances based on ideologies, arguing instead for balance. Christian circles have a lot of influence on these debates, but they neither are balanced nor truly living the way the God they claim to serve calls them to. They, more than any others, are settling for mediocrity that comes by blindly following ideologies.
The Themes of Ideology
Typical themes of concern to ideologies include…
Who Was Andrew Carnegie?
This is exactly who Carnegie was…
Five Victims of Understanding for Brainwashing
The victim need only remember that the attempt to isolate is the first attempt of the brainwasher.
College Rituals and Gender?
A gender critique of some of the very engrained rites and rituals that many of us have, will, or are even currently taking a part in. Specifically, this piece focuses on Virginia’s James Madison University, and the "duke-do’s" anticipated before graduation.
Convictions on World War I: The War and The Workers by Rosa Luxemburg
Thrice handicapped–a woman, a Pole, and a Jew– Rosa Luxemburg was the most eloquent voice of the left wing of German Social Democracy, the defender of Marxist purity against all comers, and a constant advocate of radical action. She spent much of the war in jail, where she wrote and then smuggled out the pamphlet titled "The War and the Workers." The pamphlet became the guiding statement for the International Group, which became the Spartacus League and ultimately the Communist Party of Germany in January 1st of 1919.











