« Is France Our Future? | Main | Shooting War » 18 Apr 2007 12:41 am The Wall and the Desert[Reihan] Speaking of Jane Kramer, I was a little disappointed by her take on Pope Benedict XVI from a few weeks ago. Mainly I was disappointed because of this brief aside.
I actually think -- and I'm no expert on the Catholic Church, so do take my words with a grain of salt -- that this is almost the opposite of the truth. Recently, Civitas, a British think tank, released On Fraternity, an extraordinary pamphlet by Danny Kruger, a close advisor to British Conservative leader David Cameron. I really wish I could link to the complete text, but I'm afraid I'll have to settle for this much-abridged version that appeared in Prospect late last year. Kruger opens his pamphlet with a brief discussion of Benedict XVI, and the kind of conservatism he represents.
Kruger goes on to offer a brilliant and incisive interpretation of the twin failures of Conservatism and Socialism to reckon with and reverse the "social desertification" of British life, and he offers a tentative way forward. It's the kind of argument that would drive a lot of American conservatives up the wall, I'm afraid, and it is very, very smart. Anyway, by taking on this social desertification, it seems to me (I like to think of myself as a Humanistic Muslim, though I suspect the mullahs would disapprove) that Benedict is indeed making the Catholic Church "more responsive to the realities of modern life, even if it's not in quite the ways Kramer would like. TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200d83452064869e2 Listed below are links to weblogs that reference 'The Wall and the Desert' |
