I really wish my father were here. Then I wouldn't have to depend upon my friends (that's you, M.B.) and anonymous readers (that's you, Sean) to pat me on the head and tell me how naive I am. "Taxes are bad because they take money from the people who have earned it and make it impossible for them to start new businesses, hire workers, and generally benefit the economy all around." My father loved this argument when he was talking about trying to get his auto shop to make some (any) money, but for the last fifteen years of his life, he worked for the surgery department in a public university and spent the greater part of his time at the V.A. hospital, being paid by, um, the government. He was also, in his younger days, adamantly opposed to any government-supported health care system; by the time he died, he had revised his thinking on this somewhat. The bureaucracy, waste and corruption of the insurance system had convinced him that the poor--whom he spent the...
Enjoying the U.tv course, prof! And First Things just published:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.firstthings.com/article/2019/06/in-the-academic-sandbox
IN THE ACADEMIC SANDBOX
A SKIRMISH IN MEDIEVAL STUDIES.
by Charlotte Allen
June 2019
Congrats Prof. I'm looking forward to it and to see your work grow along with Unauthorized.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your upload on unauthorized.tv . It has given me many points to reflect on and given me new reading material. Well done!
ReplyDeleteSaw this, thought of you. Might you teach a future Tolkien course after the Medieval course at U.tv?
ReplyDeletehttps://catholicism.org/tolkien-and-reality.html
Tolkien and Reality
JUL 5, 2019 CHARLES A. COULOMBE
I would love to! Have you checked out the blog for the course I teach at Chicago? https://tolkienmedievalandmodern.blogspot.com
DeleteProfessor Brown,
ReplyDeleteI resubscribed to UA.tv and I just finished the first episode of your Medieval History series. Thank you so much, it was a delightful hour and I look forward to the rest of the series.
I must confess, having experienced things in my own life far more "marvelous" than what you cited, I'm open to the possibility that the marvelous events recorded in primary sources were faithful accounts of real events. Of course, no reasonable person can believe anything that hasn't been authorized.
To misquote the Bard, "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are verified in your newspaper."
Episode 3 and the reports of monks going out into the wildernesd to seek God... I found that very intetesting.
DeleteI am so happy you are enjoying the videos! Be sure to check out the study guides, if you want to read further: https://unauthorizedmedievalhistory.blogspot.com/
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