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Comments by Matt, California, January 1, 2011
Great message, Jim. Am forwarding the link.
Comments by Donna, California, December 31, 2010
Amen!
Comments by Colman, Washington, DC, December 31, 2010
Another good one. Congrats, too, on your New York Times appearance last Sunday. You made ‘em squirm!
I took on my military friends in a Washington Post op-ed today (ROTC Still Shouldn't be on Campus). At least I thought they were my friends until I scanned through the 800-plus comments. Thanks for all your clearheaded pieces--
Note: Colman McCarthy is a former columnist and frequent contributor to the Washington Post. I've included a link to his op-ed because it's good.
Comments by Joan, California, December 31, 2010
Amen!
Comments by Tanya, Pennsylvania, December 31, 2010
Just read it, great job as always! I really enjoyed the quote from [John Baldwin] -- I just adore that guy!
Comments by Cherilyn, California, December 31, 2010
Nice one, Jim.
Comments by Clark, California, December 31, 2010
Very good!
Comments by Gary, California, December 31, 2010
Great year end review Jim.
The last line is so good.
In 2011, I pledge to supererogate more (meaning going beyond the required).
Happy New Year!
Comments by Terry, California, December 31, 2010
Amen! And I love the word "vuvuzela."
Comments by Howard, Hawaii, December 31, 2010
Nice essay. Keep it up.
Comments by David, California, December 31, 2010
Thanks for sending this and for all your important work throughout the year.
Comments by Lucy, California, December 31, 2010
You have my "Amen!" A lovely piece. I so agree with how you feel about cynicism (and about Glenn Beck... and.... and...).
Comments by Tim, Connecticut, December 31, 2010
I agree wholeheartedly with what you say in your essay. Well done!
And here's hoping we all find some of that optimism and hard work and its benefits in 2011.
Comments by Jeremy, California, December 31, 2010
I truly enjoyed it. I think that everyone feels a sense of crisis in values, though we express in different ways. The Right sees a need for increased patriotism and increased fellowship in the Church. The Left sees a need for increased solidarity and focus on service. They are both searching for their solution to the same problem: we are too atomized, too self-involved and way too focused on the dollar.
The dollar is a good carrot for good boys and girls, but it is not the best carrot - just the most ubiquitous. The best carrots are the love and respect of friends and family and the feeling of having earned a good night's sleep. At least, that's how I see it.
Comments by Loretta, California, December 31, 2010
Amen!
Comments by Mike, Texas, December 31, 2010
Read it and nicely done. However, you could have reduced the entire column to this sentence: "People are the problem, always have been, always will be. Amen."
Comments by Debbie, Idaho, December 31, 2010
Loved your essay – you covered everything.
Comments by Bruce, Connecticut, December 31, 2010
I think people fail to realize that the genius of Ronald Reagan was not his policies - with which one can seriously differ - but that he made America believe in itself again. Sure much of it was hokey bs but after the dreary Jimmy Carter, it was just what the doctor ordered.
You are right about Palin, Angle et al and especially the idiotic Beck. But the blowhards on the left are no better. Pelosi braying against the Debt Reduction Commission - which did courageous work - was a sad spectacle. I do hold out hope that President Obama, who is a bright man, will jettison his partisanship and be the leader he can. The tax compromise was a good start.
What I hate about both the left and right in this country is their obdurate certainty. I find that the older I get, the less I know. How come they know everything - although their world views are so diametrically opposite? Could it be that both are equally wrong? I believe that if Americans of goodwill sit down together and work constructively at our problems - leaving dogma behind - that we can find answers that work for all of us.
Yeats wrote: Things fall apart; the center cannot hold;
Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,
The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere
The ceremony of innocence is drowned;
The best lack all conviction, while the worst
Are full of passionate intensity.
In 2011, we all must recapture the center. The extremes are poison to us.
Comments by Roberta, California, December 31, 2010
Really enjoyed your end-of-year essay! Could you hear my "Amen!"?
Comments by Elaine, California, December 31, 2010
Jim, you seem to have a wonderful gift! (Loved your year-end essay!) Hope you continue to spread that gift to all in 2011!
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