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Wisely 's Bookmarks tagged america   View Popular

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The Death of Protestant America: A Political Theory of the Protestant Mainline

"In truth, all the talk, from the eighteenth century on, of the United States as a religious nation was really just a make-nice way of saying it was a Christian nation—and even to call it a Christian nation was usually just a soft and ecumenical attempt to gloss over the obvious fact that the United States was, at its root, a Protestant nation. Catholics and Jews were tolerated, off and on, but “the destiny of America,” as Alexis de Tocqueville observed in 1835, was “embodied in the first Puritan who landed on those shores, just as the whole human race was represented by the first man.”

Tags: history, America, protestantism on 2008-08-25 -All Annotations (0) -About

more fromwww.firstthings.com

Being the Church in a Time of Troubles

"Last week I wrote about how the moral descent of the American “empire” closely parallels that of ancient Rome. In the Roman Empire, as sexual activity increased beyond the confines of legal marriage, sexual profligacy worsened, sexual perversion was normalized, and the societal benefits of marriage disappeared. Family dissolution increased—fracturing the cornerstone of society—crime exploded, productivity and creativity diminished, cynicism and apathy ensued; the Empire began to crumble."

Tags: romans, empire, USA, roman-empire, america, marriage, culture on 2008-06-24 -All Annotations (0) -About

more fromwww.battlefortruth.org

Act to Grant Citizenship to Indians

Approved on June 2, 1924, this act of Congress granted citizenship to any Native Americans born within the United States. At the time many were still denied voting rights by individual state or local laws.

Tags: america, indians on 2008-06-20 -All Annotations (0) -About

more fromwww.archives.gov

Post-Christian America 5/23/2008

Pat Buchanan: Marriage ruling another streetlight on our 'darkening path to perdition'

Tags: postchristian, america on 2008-05-23 -All Annotations (0) -About

more fromwww.worldnetdaily.com

Chinese Exclusion Act

Approved May 6, 1882, The Chinese Exclusion Act was the first significant law restricting immigration into the United States. It provided an absolute 10-year moratorium on Chinese labor immigration. For the first time, Federal law proscribed entry of an ethnic working group on the premise that it endangered the good order of certain localities.

Tags: america, history, china, immigration on 2008-05-07 -All Annotations (0) -About

more fromwww.archives.gov

UNDERSTANDING AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM

# American culture is different; its patriotism, individualism, religiosity and spirit of enterprise make it different.
# American constitutionalism is unique in its emphasis on individual rights, decentralization and suspicion of government authority.
# Our uniquely competitive, flexible and decentralized economy has produced a high standard of living for a long time.

Tags: america on 2008-05-07 -All Annotations (0) -About

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Noah Webster on America

Every child in America should be acquainted with his own country. He should read books that furnish him with ideas that will be useful to him in life and practice. As soon as he opens his lips, he should rehearse the history of his own country.-- Noah Webster (On the Education of Youth in America, 1788)

Tags: america, history, quote on 2008-05-05 -All Annotations (0) -About

more frompatriotpost.us

Louisiana Purchase Treaty

"In this transaction with France, signed on April 30, 1803, the United States purchased 828,000 square miles of land west of the Mississippi River for $15 million. For roughly 4 cents an acre, the United States doubled its size, expanding the nation westward."

Tags: history, america on 2008-05-01 -All Annotations (0) -About

more fromwww.archives.gov

First Principles - Philosophical and Religious Dimensions of the American Founding

"The foundation of the American regime was deeply influenced by the rationalist mood of Enlightenment thought, prima­rily in its English and Scottish aspects. But it began and remained more fundamen­tally an antimodernist recovery and rearticulation of Western and English con­stitutionalism on the classical and medi­eval patterns identified with the seventeenth century of Sir Edward Coke, a principal figure of the Elizabethan Renaissance, and of John Locke, himself a principal enlightener. Moreover, all aspects of the political, constitutional, and philosophical debate were strongly conditioned by an ethics and ontology grounded in the ample range of religious convictions of an Ameri­can Protestant Christianity dominated by Dissenter or Nonconformist perspectives."

Tags: history, usa, america on 2008-05-01 -All Annotations (0) -About

more fromwww.firstprinciplesjournal.com

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The Coming Crisis in Citizenship Higher Education’s Failure to Teach America’s History and Institutions

Tags: america, history, literacy on 2007-11-02 -All Annotations (0) -About

more from209.85.165.104

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Why American Schools Create Better Leaders Than Ours ... 5/21/2007

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