... being. This is his passion. His major thesis is that nothing is so important as persons. He is profoundly concerned with the betterment of man. So it was liberals who have fought to bring real progress; the abolition of the slave trade, the enfranchisement of women, the establishment of public education, the advancement of the cause of labor, and the long struggle against poverty and injustice. The Christian liberal believes that whatever is done is right or wrong according to how it helps or hurts persons ...
... internal opposition by methods very reminiscent of the old days of tyranny. He faces the fact that diplomats traveling around the world are often much more impressed by what they see in the Soviet Union than by what they see in America. Newly enfranchised nations, such as Egypt, gladly dicker with the Soviet Union for favors and for arms. One Indian state elects a Communist government as its celebration for freedom. In each area, it seems that states liberated from imperial slavery develop very odd ways of ...