Joseph Sobran
![Joseph Sobran](/assets/img/authors/joseph-sobran.jpg)
Joseph Sobran
Michael Joseph Sobran, Jr., known as Joe Sobran, was an American journalist, formerly with National Review magazine and a syndicated columnist. Pat Buchanan called Sobran "perhaps the finest columnist of our generation"...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionActivist
Date of Birth23 February 1946
CountryUnited States of America
erosion together expansion
Wartime always brings expansions of state power, together with erosions of moral and constitutional standards.
bit cell exposed listening maybe missing phones surrounded teenagers threatened
I find myself surrounded by teenagers with body-piercing and exposed navels, gabbing on cell phones and listening to hip-hop. Maybe I'm missing something here. But I just don't feel the least bit threatened by immigrants.
legal nearly occasion power serious serves state war
War nearly always serves as an occasion for serious expansions of state power and the destruction of legal protections
century college english greek high latin offering school teaching
In one century we went from teaching Latin and Greek in high school to offering remedial English in college
intelligent people stupidity
Mass democracy guarantees stupidity. Masses of people, even if they're individually intelligent, can only act stupidly.
war patriotic order
It's a curious fact about Americans that in their most fiercely patriotic moods they are willing to set aside their Constitution, the guarantor of their freedom, in order to prosecute war -- yet they insist that the war is for 'freedom'.
war needs defense
If we need women in our defense forces, we must not need much defense.
rights government second-amendment
The Second Amendment, like the rest of the Bill of Rights, was meant to inhibit only the federal government, not the states. The framers, as The Federalist Papers attest (see No. 28), saw the state militias as forces that might be summoned into action against the federal government itself, if it became tyrannical.
christian religious style
The prevailing notion is that the state should be neutral as to religion, and furthermore, that the best way to be neutral about it is to avoid all mention of it. By this sort of logic, nudism is the best compromise among different styles of dress. The secularist version of 'pluralism' amounts to theological nudism.
block government self
Tax time approaches, and Americans are as always paying H & R Block billions to help them save some of their wealth from their ravenous government. Pitiful, in a way: it underlines the grim but unacknowledged fact that the government is their enemy and they have to hire protection from it. But don't we enjoy 'self-government'? Well, if we have it, I'd hardly say we enjoy it. True, we aren't being taxed by the monarch of Great Britain, but our American-born rulers claim far more of our wealth than the British monarchs ever did.
mean diversity clamor
When liberals clamor for 'diversity,' they don't necessarily mean they are ready to tolerate actual disagreement.
media years names
If one person in America had starved over the last 20 years, you, reader, would know his name. The media would see to that. It would be the most thoroughly documented death since John Kennedy's.
mean games jurisprudence
Like psychoanalysis, constitutional jurisprudence has become a game without rules. By defying the plain meaning of words, ignoring context and history, and using a little ingenuity, you can make the Constitution mean anything you like.
law liberty may
Tyranny may creep in under the outward forms of traditional law.