The Canyon That is Not a Canyon
March 16, 2018[…] what do most people do? Most people take the thousand bucks and content themselves with it. They buy a month of steak dinners, a Louis Vuitton purse, a flat-screen TV. Tam starts to say […]
[…] what do most people do? Most people take the thousand bucks and content themselves with it. They buy a month of steak dinners, a Louis Vuitton purse, a flat-screen TV. Tam starts to say […]
[…] need.” “Maybe we’ll create money,” Kim answered. “Money is the seedbed of inequality.” “But what could we buy or sell? And who would buy it?” “We start accumulating things we don’t need.” “Such as?” […]
Six cars pulled through the intersection, one after the other over the course of an hour, but none of them was hers. Barefoot, Bart waited on the slat bench outside his front door, picking […]
[…] doing what’s right, but he was countered by the logic of refusing to support a corrupt g overnment that funded such abominations as abortion clinics, deviant artists, and welfare moms. My father then quoted […]
[…] We’ll figure half of it is already yours, an inheritance from your mother. The other half, you buy out, and that’s what Aliza and me will use to set up a boarding house. I’m […]
[…] be in her late forties. I know she’s Mormon, too, because her garments show when she bends over. She has auburn hair with pink highlights, and she’s wearing two studs in one ear and […]
[…] night. The clouds gather across the broken plateau and race to our bedroom window as I brood over banks of monitors, shoulders hunched and wrapped in a blanket. A trio of alerts begin flashing. […]
[…] origins and upbringing of its first translator. An example of this style is in 1 Nephi 5: 6: And after this manner of language did my father, Lehi, comfort my Mother, Sariah, concerning us […]
[…] A brief history of the founding of the Institute system seems appropriate at this time, since 19 67 marks the fortieth anniversary of classes held at the first of these Institutes of Religion. Almost […]
[…] never thrown any votes anywhere; he is only handicapped if his party fails to win a majority over all the other parties put together—like Johnson or Wilson or any other parliamentary executive. Tixier’s doctrine […]