Bio

Mollie Ziegler Hemingway is a columnist for Christianity Today and contributor to GetReligion.org. Her writing on religion, economics and baseball has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, The Guardian, Federal Times, Radio & Records and Modern Reformation. Originally from Colorado, she lives in Washington with her husband and two children. She enjoys combing flea markets to improve her vinyl record collection and believes that the designated hitter rule is the result of a Communist plot.


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Mollie Hemingway, Ed.'s Profile

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.
Name:
Mollie Hemingway, Ed.
Joined:
May 25, 2010

Recent Comments

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.
Mike Hinton: I'm surprised I haven't seen an explanation, but my guess has always been that they are messing with stuff behind the scenes as they work towards a new site layout. I don't think it's inherent instability, but rather maintenance without taking the whole site down. · 10 minutes ago

I'm going to ask the suits to explain it, since I'm not technical, but we were notified of something along these lines that was to take place during our least busy hours (early AM today). And that went fine, but there was some debris left over when they finished and it caused some problems.

I was actually having trouble loading many pages and that's all been cleaned up -- but the alerts are buggy. I assume it's related to the work done above but I'll report it and make sure.

I do apologize for the frustrations and problems ...

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

John Murdoch: This is astonishing--but in light of recent events, not surprising at all.

But--what is the relationship between Lerner and the attorney asking questions about Pat Robertson praying for Col. North? Absent some tangible connection, it seems to me that the entire event could be hand-waved as "aggressive questioning in the scope of a wide-ranging deposition of a famously combative witness." · 6 minutes ago

She had same position at FEC as at IRS -- head of the enforcement division. It was under her authority that the FEC launched the onerous investigation of the Christian Coalition.

This exchange was just a small part of that investigation, which was wide-ranging.

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

Butters

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

That's where I am, too. Of course, one way you can tell I'm a libertarian is that I'm far less interested in talking about the government's role in all of this than I am in people living virtuously without government coercion. · 14 minutes ago

That's fine in the abstract, but it does nothing to protect the rights of the unborn individual whose mother chooses not to live virtuously.

I agree though, legal enforcement of a pro-life position posses its own challenges. · 1 minute ago

What do you think are the challenges?

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

QuickerBrownFox: There are three pro-life enforcement questions for me:

For the record, I'm part of the one third. As pro-life libertarians, I think enforcement of abortion laws is the hardest part of the debate. Of course, enforcement isn't nil on the pro-choice side either, as seen by the Gosnell case. · 1 minute ago

That's where I am, too. Of course, one way you can tell I'm a libertarian is that I'm far less interested in talking about the government's role in all of this than I am in people living virtuously without government coercion.

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

I was baptized into Christ when I was 3 weeks old. Lutherans emphasize baptism as the means by which we are brought into the faith, and we remember it daily and Luther wrote that we make the sign of the cross to remember this.

In fact, we tend to distrust emotional feelings of being saved as  opposed to objective things we can point to (e.g., I was baptized on this date and the Bible says baptism saves me, etc.).

I do remember dating a Mormon and him telling me to do that thing where I pray for God to show me that Mormonism was true. It didn't work. I remember wondering if that worked for a lot of people.

Also, it made me see some of the similarities between LDS approaches and others that arose from the burntover movements.

Now having said all that, I have had moments of religious ecstasy as well as inexplicable comfort. I've also had an experience of otherworldly evil ...

Which made it surprisingly hard for a logical fanatic such as myself to get fully into unbelief!

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

It's such a laughable idea that people would create more work for themselves because they were overworked. Laughable. But it gave the New York Times enough of an excuse to drop journalistic curiosity, so maybe I'm the foolish one ...

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

I'm surprised by how openly my scientist friends acknowledge that they research climate mostly because that's where the money is. One told me he had to figure out a tie between what he really wanted to study and climate and that if he didn't, he would never be able to study it.

Stem cell research is another obvious one. It turns out that embryonic-destroying stem cell research has been something of a bust while regular stem cell research that doesn't destroy other human beings holds great promise. But remember how California, flush with so much cash, decided to fund an ESCR to the tune of millions of dollars?

The other obvious area is anything dealing with sexuality. You'll notice that studies about, say, health effects of homosexuality disappear about 20 years ago. If they crop up again, they say things radically different. If your studies show anything negative about homosexuality that can't be spun as a result of homophobia, good luck keeping your job, much less getting funding! It won't happen. Only an idiot would actually try to research that issue independently and without a pre-determined agenda.

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

BrentB67

One lesson I learned is to stop trying to answer every question in the post, leave some loose ends for others to share their insight or questions. · 6 hours ago

That's exactly right. I save some of what i want to say for engaging readers in the comments.

And there's nothing wrong with writing a post designed to generate comments. I mean, that's what we are -- a conversation site. We want the conversation and that's what makes us successful.

I like it in part because it's such a different style of writing than what I typically get to do as a journalist -- which usually means I just lay something out as dryly and fairly as possible under deadline pressure and word count limits.

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

TL;DR.

Just kidding.

As counterintuitive as it seems, and there are definitely exceptions to this rule, we've found that the shorter the original post, the lengthier the conversation.

It's kind of humiliating, actually, to spend all this time on a brilliant essay and get 0-5 responses. Then you post a silly picture or YouTube video or write a 1-sentence post and you're wrangling a 300+comment thread.

But them's the shakes.

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

A Beleaguered Conservative: Here is how the IRS justified the staging of the question and answer:

Agency officials, the IRS said in its statement, “felt the review was far enough along and that the facts were known that it was appropriate to address the issue at the tax conference panel during the question and answer session. It was important for this integral group in the Exempt Organization community to hear first-hand that we made mistakes in handling the process.”

This statement is nonsense.  If the IRS simply wanted to get the facts out, Lerner would have raised the issue in her speech.  Why bother to plant a question instead?   

The IRS faked a question and pretended to spontaneously answer it to make it look like this was a minor matter that just happened to come up in the question-and-answer session, and to suggest that the IRS had been working to solve the problem all along.  This kind of cheap dissimulation is nauseating.         · 7 hours ago

The more I think about this, the worse it seems. Really inappropriate behavior from a federal official.

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

Frozen Chosen

~Paules: Dallin Oaks?  Wasn't he one of the characters from The Hobbit? · 1 hour ago

Who is Dallin Oaks?  Well, his many accomplishments include;

  • Law professor at the University of Chicago Law school
  • President of Brigham Young University, the largest private university in the US
  • A justice of the Utah Supreme Court
  • A member of the Quorum of Twelve Apostles of the LDS church

In addition, he has written and spoken extensively about the importance of freedom of religion in our society, which is why the Becket Fund was honoring him.

He's a good man. · 15 minutes ago

Not entirely surprising, given my own familiarity with Western living, but he has to be in his early 80s, looks like he's a good 20 years younger, and is a heck of a public speaker.

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

kohana:

Mollie, that remark still enrages me, I can't believe he said it, I post that remark whenever I have the opportunity, especially to my progressive family members and friends. · 2 minutes ago

Yes! It still bothers me, too! And it bothered me even before I realized it was all based on falsehoods.

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

Illiniguy: How did you respond to a comment that's below your response?

Pseudodionysius

Colin B Lane: I think they mean he's preparing to go Bullwinkle. His whole administration is a cartoon. · in 2 minutes

"Watch me pull a rabbit out of my hat." · 1 minute ago

#17

Colin B Lane: I think they mean he's preparing to go Bullwinkle. His whole administration is a cartoon. · in 0 minutes

#18

10 minutes ago

Time travel, obviously. Or glitches in the software?

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

Franco: I employ this quite often and I think it is what everyone should do, within reason.

 Once in a bookstore around 2004 a man answered his phone and carried on a loud conversation about stock prices and what he thought they would do next. I joined the conversation and started giving him my opinion about stocks, as though he was also talking to me - which he, in effect was - he was shocked and annoyed but went outside. I've used this tactic a few times since. Of course you have to be willing to break social conventions, but that's what they are doing, right?

This "mind you own business" attitude makes me livid. It ismy business when people are being intrusive or rude in public.  · 20 minutes ago

This is brilliant and I'm stealing it.

Re: Srsly?

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.
Mothership_Greg: Mollie's old pal Jeffrey Toobin's take on the current IRS scandal has to be read to be believed. 

How much do I love you for remembering my rant(s) against Toobin!

Fwiw, my husband had these thoughts on Toobin's latest here.

Mollie Hemingway, Ed.

CygnusA81: Please Mr. President, DO IT! You know why, real life ain't Hollywood and it will backfire.

Hell, even the French are sick of their socialist PM. The FRENCH! · 5 minutes ago

I know! It would be so awesome. I hope he really does. Like, if this is him holding back ...

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