As CEO
of a company offering temporary furnished housing — a new frontier in its own
right — I've seen both the benefits and the potential pitfalls
of carving
out a new
arena in the on - demand economy.
@Sarah: You may choose to focus on what you like as well but it doesn't cancel
out the fact that in our political
arena today, we have religious
right politicians coming
out of the woodwork and campaigning on their alleged moral superiority.
Spelled
out in a lengthy lead editorial entitled «Evangelicals in the Social Struggle,» as well as in books such as Aspects
of Christian Social Ethics, Henry's understanding
of Christian social responsibility stressed (a) society's need for the spiritual regeneration
of all men and women, (b) an interim social program
of humanitarian care, ethical proclamation, and personal, structural application, and (c) a theory
of limited government centering on certain «freedom
rights,» e. g., the
rights to public property, free speech, and so on.18 Though the shape
of this social ethic thus closely parallels that
of the present editorial position
of Moody Monthly, it must be distinguished from its counterpart by the time period involved (it pushed others like Moody Monthly into a more active involvement in the social
arena), by the intensity
of its commitment to social responsibility, by the sophistication
of its insight into political theory and practice, and by its willingness to offer structural critique on the American political system.
Rather than the usually left to
right movement, King
of the Hill has smaller one screen
arenas with players fighting it
out for the «hill» that must be held for a period
of time to win.