Moral principles, standards, and values and their influence upon the mission, organization, and training of members serving within the profession of arms. Also addresses ethical issues pertinent to military families.
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Written by George Weigel
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Tuesday, 27 July 2010 19:33 |
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Roland Bainton, who died in 1984, was a fixture at the Yale Divinity School for more than four decades and remained an influential Church historian over during two decades of retirement. His most popular book was Here I Stand: A Life of Martin Luther; but Luther scholarship has gone far beyond Bainton since Here I Stand was published in 1950. Bainton’s Christian Attitudes Toward War and Peace, however, which was first published in 1960, continues to exert a significant influence on Christian thought today. The question is whether that influence is helpful, or baleful.
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 28 July 2010 21:39 |
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Written by Judy McCloskey
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Friday, 29 January 2010 01:05 |
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Due in part to the recent State of the Union address, our US military is once again tasked to battle the issue of homosexuality among its ranks, specifically whether or not 10 USC 634- the "don't ask, don't tell" law- should be upheld or repealed. The Catholic Church remains equally unmoved in regards to homosexuality as it is to heterosexuality; singling out the military community is to reduce the moral question to a matter of mere location.
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 02 February 2010 19:27 |
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Written by Hank Heusinkveld
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Friday, 11 December 2009 17:25 |
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KABUL, Afghanistan -- On the outskirts of Kabul at a refugee camp, U.S. Army Chaplain (Lt. Col.) Eric Albertson holds a plastic bag filled with toys and school supplies.
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Last Updated on Saturday, 23 January 2010 19:51 |
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Written by George Weigel
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Sunday, 06 December 2009 18:15 |
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Dan Henninger, whose Wall Street Journal column is aptly titled "Wonder Land," put it best: "The only good news about the Fort Hood massacre is that U.S. electronic surveillance technology was able to pick up Major Hasan's phone calls to an al Qaeda-loving imam in Yemen. The bad news is that the people and agencies listening to Hasan didn't know what to do about it. Other than nothing."
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Last Updated on Saturday, 23 January 2010 19:47 |
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Written by George Weigel
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Friday, 17 July 2009 00:05 |
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Where do things stand, two months after the University of Notre Dame defied the bishop of Fort Wayne-South Bend and some eighty of his fellow-bishops by awarding an honorary doctorate of laws to the university's 2009 commencement speaker, the President of the United States?
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Last Updated on Monday, 27 July 2009 02:00 |
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Written by Thomas L. McDonald
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Monday, 02 February 2009 21:47 |
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History Games Straddle a Fine Line Between Realism and Exploitation...
Saving Private Ryan cast a long shadow over game design. Steven Spielberg's use of handheld cameras and graphic depictions of combat violence created an intense and unblinking view of the horrors of war.
Gaming - particularly 3-D, first-person action gaming - was still coming of age when the movie was released in 1998, and Spielberg himself saw the potential of the genre.Working with his team at DreamWorks Interactive, he developed "Medal of Honor" (1999) to recreate the realism and intensity of Saving Private Ryan as an interactive experience. It seems to be a natural extension of the evolution of media: Put control of an experience like Saving Private Ryan in the hands of the viewer, while maintaining the same level of respect for the material.
But it's not that simple.
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Last Updated on Tuesday, 10 March 2009 04:24 |
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