There’s no more pretending, at least not way up here in upstate New York. The leaves are turning, the back-to-school sales are already over, and city folks are bringing their kids up here to start their semesters…the evidence is in: Fall is just around the corner. Here are some stories you might have missed as you scramble to store up acorns for winter:
Our ILYBYGTH story-of-the-week: Google fires an engineer for questioning diversity policy.
- In WaPo, Erick Erickson opines on the terror this brings to the hearts of social conservatives.
- Based on Rod Dreher’s reaction, conservatives really are soiling their britches about this case.
- Is this Brendan Eich and Mozilla all over again?
- Or is this the latest example of progressive, politically correct anti-science?
- Does the same problem apply in academic jobs?
- Here’s the ILYBYGTH take.
Other stories that floated by our raft this week:
Want to try Christian theocracy? Ari Feldman wonders if you can do it with a quick trip to Texas.
Trump’s “court evangelicals” ask the Vatican for a meet. Why can’t they all get along?
How did climate-change denialism become an evangelical belief? Check out Brendan O’Connor’s piece in Splinter. HT: DL
How did one evangelical purist hope to save the Religious Right from its deal with the GOP devil? Daniel Silliman explains the history at Religion & Politics.
Captain America, meet POTUS Shield: Prophetic Order of the United States. Pentecostal leaders declare Trump “anointed by God,” an interview at Religion Dispatches with Peter Montgomery.
Parents win a big settlement from a Minnesota charter school. They had sued because the school did not do enough to protect their transgender six-year-old. The school promised to force all families to go along with its new inclusive policies, even if the parents have religious objections.
Forget evolution, religion, or any of that noise. The real problem wrecking public education is the forty-year old boondoggle of special education. At least, that’s Stephen Beale’s argument at American Conservative.
Worried about Florida’s new textbook opt-out law? Relax, says historian Jonathan Zimmerman—it’s a good thing.
- I’m not so sure. Here’s my take on similar opt-out efforts in the past, in the Washington Post.