Required Reading for Chris Wallace
Two provocative essays from Imprimis, a monthly publication of Hillsdale College:
We are often told that we possess the most powerful military in the world and that we will face no serious threat for some time to come. We are comforted with three reassurances aimed at deflecting any serious discussion of national security: (1) that Islam is a religion of peace; (2) that we will never go to war with China because our economic interests are intertwined; and (3) that America won the Cold War and Russia is no longer our enemy. But these reassurances are myths, propagated on the right and left alike. We believe them at our peril, because serious threats are already upon us. – Brian Kennedy, Claremont Institute
To begin, consider one of the most important measures of property, the kilogram. It’s a measure of mass or, for non-scientific purposes, weight. According to the papers last week, a global scramble is under way to define this most basic unit after it was discovered that the standard kilogram— a cylinder of platinum and iridium that is maintained by the International Bureau of Weights and Measures — has been losing mass. – Seth Lipsky, New York Sun







