John Leo

John Leo
John Leois a writer and editor in chief of Minding the Campus, an independent, non-profit web site on America's colleges and universities. He joined the Manhattan Institute as a senior fellow in 2007 to launch the project and developed the site at the Institute for the past 8 years. He is also a Visitor of Ralston College, a start-up liberal arts college in Savannah...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionWriter
CountryUnited States of America
addicted brooding double firmly opposite people principled seem spend standards switch time
I spend some of my time brooding about people who seem addicted to double standards - those who take an allegedly principled stand on a Monday, then switch firmly to the opposite principle on Tuesday if it is to their advantage.
directly politics
Churches should not be directly involved in politics.
adjusted comparable jobs raw
But that was a raw number, not adjusted for comparable jobs and responsibility.
began damaged emphasis instead life lives lost meaning qualify sanctity
Instead of the traditional emphasis on the sanctity of life, bioethics began to stress the quality of life, meaning that many damaged humans, young and old, don't qualify for personhood because their lives have lost value.
becoming blowing clouds hard ignore later microsoft possibly
I think it will be hard for us to ignore it completely, but we look at possibly the clouds blowing away and things becoming a little more sanguine for Microsoft later in the year,
ability based continue core dominant drive franchise holding internet
It will continue to be a core holding for us, no doubt, based upon its dominant franchise and its long-term ability to consolidate and drive the way the Internet is moving,
business level obviously support
It's not why I'm in the business. ... It's not something I relish. ... I do it because it obviously is part of the whole process. It has to be done at some level to support the business.
acquiring against almost books environmental evidence fed insists interested involved known learned mass mentioned nuclear poverty rarely review shows terrorists though weapons writer york
Though evidence shows that the terrorists are interested in acquiring nuclear weapons to use against our cities, a learned writer for the New York Review of Books insists that the real weapons of mass destruction are world poverty and environmental abuse. Of course, world poverty is rarely mentioned by terrorists, and those known to be involved have almost all been well fed and are well to do.
winning debate ifs
If winning is the only value, why debate when you can suppress?
hands executives subordinates
... a meddler who cannot leave his subordinates alone is a hands on executive.
wish bitterness multitudes
We are seeing the bitterness of elites who wish to lead, confronted by multitudes who do not wish to follow.
war fighting sight
[D]rawing up 'secret war plans' for a possible attack on Iraq wasn't irrational. The low-level war against Saddam was 12 years old, with no end in sight. American and British pilots were getting shot at, sanctions weren't working, and Bush was getting warnings that Saddam had all those terrible weapons and would use them against America. Bush would have been a fool not to draw up plans. Gee, wait till the critics find out that FDR, without ever informing the media, was plotting to fight Japan and Germany before Pearl Harbor.
wine espresso roots
Compared with other Americans, journalists are more likely to live in upscale neighborhoods, have maids, own Mercedes and trade stocks, and less likely to go to church, do volunteer work or put down roots in a community. Journalists are over-represented in ZIP code areas where residents are twice as likely as other Americans to rent foreign movies, drink Chablis, own an espresso maker and read magazines such as Architectural Digest and Food & Wine.
school government world
Bioethics has hardened into an activist ideology that pervades the medical world, the schools, and government.