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1 y ·Youtube General Interest

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Personality Tests Marathon to Crack Your Personality Code
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BlabberBuzz Feed
BlabberBuzz Feed
1 y

INSANE Road Rage Incident In Indiana Ends In Tragedy! Warning: GRAPHIC Video
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INSANE Road Rage Incident In Indiana Ends In Tragedy! Warning: GRAPHIC Video

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Living In Faith
Living In Faith
1 y

Why People Don’t Believe in Jesus - Greg Laurie Devotion - July 20/21, 2024
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Why People Don’t Believe in Jesus - Greg Laurie Devotion - July 20/21, 2024

It is not for us to edit the message of the Bible. It is for us as Christians to simply deliver it.
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Rocky Wells
Rocky Wells
1 y

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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

Boat timber from Late Viking Oslo found
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Boat timber from Late Viking Oslo found

A section of a wooden boat discovered in Oslo is much older than archaeologists thought, and indeed may be Oslo’s oldest boat part. Researchers from the Norwegian Institute for Cultural Heritage Research (NIKU) discovered on the seabed in Bjørvika, a neighborhood east of the city center of Oslo in an inlet of the fjord. It was Oslo’s harbor from the time of its founding by Norway’s last Viking king Harald Hardrada in 1048 through the 17th century. The area is rife with shipwreck remains. Most of them date to the 16th and 17th centuries; there are a number from the 14th century and only one dating back to the 13th century. In the 2022-2023 excavation, NIKU archaeologists found a well-preserved piece of finely crafted timber in the thick clay of the seabed. It was found under the equally well-preserved remains of a wooden wharf that was dated to approximately 1300. Archaeologists therefore assumed the ship part would date to around the same time, but the shape of the section gave them pause. It was very different from the other shipwreck remains they’d uncovered in the area. It is curved on one side and has a hole in the center through which the mast for the ship’s sail was attached. Dendrochronological analysis of a sample from the timber revealed the tree it sprouted in 1035 and was felled between 1087 and 1100. That dates it to the end of the Viking Age when Oslo was still a small town, more than 200 years before the wharf the timber was found under was built. “There’s an aesthetic quality to the ship part we’ve found that we don’t find in the more roughly hewn parts from cargo ships and work ships made in the Middle Ages,” [NIKU archaeologist Håvard] Hegdal tells sciencenorway.no. “In older ships, it sometimes happens that the planks in the hull are decorated externally with planed lines. But this ship part has decoration on all sides. Even where it has barely been visible,” he says. Hegdal emphasises that the ship part from Bjørvika cannot be compared with Viking ships like the Gokstad ship from around the year 890, which features more complex lines and specialised planing. “It showcases both advanced maritime technology and exquisite aesthetics,” he says.
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

Time (Again) for a Niebuhrian Revival
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Time (Again) for a Niebuhrian Revival

A little over a decade and a half ago, at the close of the what had been up, until that point, among the most arrogant and clueless of American presidencies, there seemed, if for only a short while, a…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

Stop Equating Reagan with Neoconservatism
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Stop Equating Reagan with Neoconservatism

While they’ve never been successful in actually democratizing a foreign country, neoconservatives have had one major success: convincing the mainstream that Ronald Reagan agreed with them on foreign…
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YubNub News
YubNub News
1 y

Meet One of the Rassemblement National’s New MPs
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Meet One of the Rassemblement National’s New MPs

“I am French, very French,” Sophie-Laurence Roy avows, as we bound across the hills of northern Burgundy in her sedan. Roy draws on her cigarette, and gestures at the vine-dappled slopes and the rolling…
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Rocky Wells
Rocky Wells
1 y

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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Time (Again) for a Niebuhrian Revival
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Time (Again) for a Niebuhrian Revival

Politics Time (Again) for a Niebuhrian Revival We must counter the hubris of Washington’s governing elite. A little over a decade and a half ago, at the close of the what had been up, until that point, among the most arrogant and clueless of American presidencies, there seemed, if for only a short while, a yearning both within Washington and the country at large for a return to normalcy, a desire to abandon the unilateralism and wars of choice that became the hallmark of U.S. foreign policy beginning on September 11, 2001. The desire to rethink the prevailing assumptions of hegemony and endless war manifested itself in some quarters, mainly among journalists and intellectuals, in a renewed interest in the work of the mid-20th century theologian Reinhold Niebuhr, known, if at all, among the churchgoing public as the author of the Serenity Prayer. The son of a German pastor, Niebuhr was born in 1892 in Wright City, Missouri. He became among the most trenchant critics of America’s postwar transformation into a Cold War hegemon, which he saw as antithetical to both the best traditions of the country and to a vibrant and healthy democracy.  Niebuhr understood that the exercise of global power in the postwar decades came with its own set of problems. The intellectual historian Wilfred MaClay has observed that for Niebuhr, “the pursuit of good ends in the arenas of national and international politics had to take full account of the un-loveliness of human nature, and the un-loveliness of power.” As far as I can tell, the first major public intellectual to call for a Niebuhrian Revival was the international relations scholar Andrew Bacevich in 2008. At the time, hopes were high among conservatives (remember the ObamaCons?) that Obama, thoughtful, measured, mature, and, perhaps most importantly, Not Hillary, would take U.S. foreign policy in new, less sanguinary directions. He gave every indication that he might. Speaking with David Brooks in 2007, Obama claimed Niebuhr was his “favorite philosopher.” In 2009, the Pew Research Center held a conference featuring E.J. Dionne on “the recent revival of interest in Niebuhrian thought.” And as late as 2014, a TIME magazine contributor claimed to have “heard a distinct Niebuhrian strain” in a speech Obama gave on the Middle East. It was not surprising that after eight years of Bush-Cheney— which brought us military disaster, economic ruin, and national disgrace—there would be a renewed interest in the work of Niebuhr who, in his 1952 book The Irony of American History, observed that, if we should perish, the ruthlessness of the foe would be only the secondary cause of the disaster. The primary cause would be that the strength of a giant nation was directed by eyes too blind to see all the hazards of the struggle; and the blindness would be induced not by some accident of nature or history but by hatred and vainglory. Unfortunately, Obama’s repudiation of Washington’s imperial arrogance was short lived. In some ways, in spite of a few adroitly delivered speeches, his foreign policy exhibited an arrogance on par with that of his predecessor: The destruction of Libya; the attempted destruction of Syria; and a new and more dangerous Cold War with Russia are among Obama’s troubling legacies.  Today, President Joe Biden, overseeing what is for all intents and purposes a third Obama term, makes Bush, Cheney and Co. seem almost humble by comparison. Niebuhr, citing John Adams, recognized what Biden and his team of liberal interventionists (they refer to themselves, by the way, as “the A-Team”) clearly do not, that power, always thinks it has a great soul and vast views beyond the comprehension of the weak; and that it is doing God’s service when it is violating all His laws. Consider the recent televised exchange between Biden and ABC’s George Stephanopoulos: Stephanopoulos: Would you be willing to undergo an independent medical evaluation that included neurological and cognit– cognitive tests and release the results to the American people? Biden: Look. I have a cognitive test every single day. Every day I have that test. Everything I do. You know, not only am I campaigning, but I’m running the world. Not—and that’s not hy—sounds like hyperbole, but we are the essential nation of the world. Read that again: I am running the world. We are the essential nation of the world. Comments like these make it clear that among the greatest dangers we face is the unmitigated, undisguised hubris of our elected leaders. Which brings us to the man of the hour.  Having been, by luck or some otherworldly power, spared his life after the nearest of misses, there are signs that the former President Trump might take a more measured, mature approach going forward. In a widely read interview with the Washington Examiner, Trump said he re-drafted his RNC acceptance address in light of last weekend’s assassination attempt. “It is,” he said, “a chance to bring the country together. I was given that chance.” It might be too much to expect that the foreign policy proposals of his current crop of advisers will likewise undergo a thoughtful reconsideration. Time will tell. But Reinhold Niebuhr understood the “ironies of history.” Might it be Donald Trump, of all people, to be the one who brings us just a bit closer to that long hoped for Niebuhrian Revival? The post Time (Again) for a Niebuhrian Revival appeared first on The American Conservative.
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