
Denise Milliner
550 posts









1. Being elitist is good (and inclusive to boot, actually) 2. There’s the obvious argument of authorial intent and respect for the author’s works 3. Half of the books on this pile were written for CHILDREN. If you’re an adult and don’t have a disability and need an abridged version to be able to read Jules Verne or Jack London, yes, I WILL mock you. If that makes me "elitist" then so be it. 4. Soft bigotry of low expectations






Medieval Monday! With Christ the King Sunday completed, we approach the season of Advent. What's the medieval way to celebrate Advent? Fasting and penitence! You wouldn't know it by the number of chocolate Advent calendars sold each year, but Advent historically was a time for prayer, fasting, and contemplation in order to prepare ourselves spiritually for Christ's second coming. We often retain the second coming readings during this time of year, but not so much the fasting. In fact, it seems people forget that Advent and Christmastide are two different seasons.


marry someone you like doing chores with. figure this out early on. cook dinner together and then clean up the kitchen on your fourth date. build an ikea desk. go camping and set up a tent after dark in the rain.


The pendulum of “style” swings back and forth HARD - but in our case it's more than just style that influences us, it's *how these houses felt to grow up in* Those raised in magazine-perfect homes grew up and themselves had cluttered homes... then their kids (detoxing from the stress of that) became minimalists... and now THEIR kids want... warm, cozy Beatrix Potter homes. And yet through it all, these things are timeless - it's just all about execution.



School KILLs the love of reading by quizzing kids on unimportant plot details I get it - you are trying to ensure kids actually read the book for class But by teaching this way, you ensure they stop reading altogether


I was on a panel with @McCormickProf last fall at the Touchstone Conference, and a question came up about elite institutions. He talked about how we can infiltrate and capture elite institutions, citing as an example the James Madison Program at Princeton, where Robbie George has spent nearly his entire career. The Madison Program is 25 years old. It has not captured Princeton. Similar programs at places like Harvard and Yale have also failed to capture those places. I responded to George by saying that some leftist institutions, including the Ivy League universities, cannot be infiltrated and captured. And if they cannot be captured then they should be destroyed--not just passively, by not sending our children to them, but by actively targeting and destroying them through deliberate public policy. The people who aspire to George's career arch don't want to hear that, because it means they will never have the elite career that George has had.









Kelsey Peterson: This is perhaps the one debt of gratitude I owe to AI thus far: that it’s clarified what writing is, and that writing is for humans. frontporchrepublic.com/2025/09/writin…



