Past weekend was big Faranda outdoors weekend

Well actually an extended weekend, counting Friday. Early Friday morning Mom, Dad, and Tim went on a 40 minute bike ride, out onto Croton point and then down along the waterfront to Senasqua Park. Then Friday evening Brigid finally got going with her kayak, which she’d gotten way back in December for her birthday. She … Read more

Darfur Update – the Olympic protest

No doubt, there is going to be controversy over the Chinese human rights record at the Olympics. And the Chinese support the  will not speak out about Sudanese government's genocide in Darfur – China is the Sudan's leading market for oil. I received this email from the Save Daurfur coalition today. tom, I was about … Read more

Further thoughts on Alexandr Solzhenitsyn

I previously posted stuff here Tom Faranda's Folly: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and here Tom Faranda's Folly: More on Solzhenitsyn Go here for additional reflections - Solzhenitsyn and His Critics – The Acton Institute Solzhenitsyn’s critique of modern societies went much deeper than ideology. He drew from a Christian moral tradition, not a political platform. He yearned for a … Read more

More on Solzhenitsyn

I posted about him yesterday.Tom Faranda’s Folly: Alexandr Solzhenitsyn Washington Post columnist Anne Applebaum has a wonderful tribute this morning. Excerpt below, but hit the link and read the whole brief essay – it’s only nine paragraphs. Anne Applebaum – Stronger Than the Gulag – washingtonpost.com In the week of his death, though, what stands out … Read more

Alexandr Solzhenitsyn

One of my heroes. He died Sunday at the age of 89. It’s actually pretty amazing he lived as long as he did, since he developed cancer while he was in a Soviet concentration camp and received very poor treatment for it, for several years. I read his first book, One Day in the Life … Read more