From The Reporter's Notebook Georgetown University renamed a building on campus named for a former university president who sold Jesuit-owned slaves to a Louisiana plantation to pay of campus debt. According to TPM's Caitlin MacNeal, Jesuits in Maryland owned slaves in the 17th and 18th centuries in an attempt to assert their rights as landowners in a Protestant-dominated region. BUZZING: Today in the Hive From a TPM Prime member: "Prior to 9/11 we could have spent a lot less money -- vastly less -- to create an initiative to improve the lives of people in the Middle East, to provide gentle but firm pressure upon nations receiving U.S. aid or arms to engage in political reforms, to improve education, trade and commerce. It's much more complicated now, but we still could engage in a modern Marshall Plan in some nations the Middle East, and perhaps Europe would help support the plan. But there's little political interest (on either side) in the sort of efforts and reforms that could drain the proverbial swamp." Related: Jeb Bush called the Paris attacks the war of our time. Have something to add? Become a Prime member and join the discussion here. What We're Reading How a prized daughter of the Westboro Baptist Church came to question its beliefs. (The New Yorker) The real debate: two very different world views on terrorism. (NPR) Ben Carson separated twins, but didn't always save them. (The Boston Globe) | |
No comments:
Post a Comment