On a David Lebovitz food, chocolate, wine tour several years ago, Alex Lobrano, former European correspondent for the now defunct Gourmet magazine, joined us for dinner one evening at one of Christian Constant’s establishments in Paris’ 7th arrondissement. David, former pastry chef for Alice Water’s Chez Panisse in Berkley, CA, is the author of The […]
The Menace of Militant Islam
Read here comments from the late Christopher Hitchens on the 2006 deadly riots over cartoons published in a Danish newspaper depicting Muhammad, as quotes by The Wall Street Journal. The incredible thing about the ongoing Kristallnacht against Denmark (and in some places, against the embassies and citizens of any Scandinavian or even European Union nation) […]
“Like Cuba without Sunshine”
Those words were uttered as a warning to François Hollande as high-earning soccer players threatened to go on strike, and the richest man in France, Bernard Arnault, threatened to follow actor Gérard Depardieu, along with 200,000 other French, to southern Belgium. All because of the supertax imposed on high-income earners. The hallmark of Mr. Hollande’s […]
Delicious, Simple, Clean and Healthful
Are you looking to get off to a nutritious, healthful start in the New Year? In many of the world’s traditional cuisines, the most important piece of equipment in the kitchen is the stockpot. A good stock, containing the minerals of bones, cartilage, marrow and vegetables, is easy to digest and assimilate. According to Nourishing […]
2015—Optimism and Hope?
The November election (anti Obama) helped put “peppery” Boone Pickens in an “upbeat” mood, until, as Mr. Pickens notes, “then the goofball says ‘65% didn’t vote and those are the ones I represent!’ ” BP was worried that America had lost itself, but he is more optimistic now because we have “only another year of […]
Christmas in Flanders Fields
This past weekend, Dick and I went to Symphony Hall with two of our grandchildren to enjoy the Boston Pops. Among the highlights of the festive holiday performance was a reading by Karen MacDonald of A Soldier’s Carol: The Christmas Truce of 1914. Through a combination of music and story, the nine-minute narration recreated the […]
Vermont—the Canary in the O’Care Coal Mine
Dick and I have spent untold miles on our Harleys riding in pastoral Vermont—still largely covered by verdant forest—with its scenic roads, quaint villages, acres of rolling farmlands and apple orchards, covered bridges, and views minus billboards (yes, there are no billboards). Combine this with Vermont’s charming inns and enthusiastic farm-to-table movement, and you have […]
People Will Die
Will the Supreme Court justices “twist themselves into John Roberts-like pretzels” to avoid upending Obama’s signature legislative accomplishment, asks Cato Institute’s Michael Tanner. Next spring the Court will rule on whether subsidies for Obamacare are to be allowed, and, in anticipation of the ruling, the hysteria is already beginning. Should the justices rule to uphold […]
Confiscating Wealth and Controlling Income
Originally posted November 25, 2014. Why is inequality a symptom of economic problems? Should any of us care if some people get rich and others get even richer? Wouldn’t a more distressing problem be if we all became poorer? John H. Cochrane, professor of finance at the University of Chicago and an adjunct scholar at […]
Who Is that Masked Man?
“Riding herd on cronyists who give capitalism a bad name by giving or taking special government favors” is what Texas Rep. Jeb Hensarling does best. Mr. Hensarling has spent the last decade trying to stop cronyism in government programs that grease the palms of well-connected business elites. With K Street lobbyists about to put enormous […]
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