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November 13, 2004
You're in the Agora
The Agora, the civic center and marketplace, was one of the most important parts of an ancient city of Greece. In addition to being a place where people gathered to buy and sell all kinds of commodities, it was also a place where people assembled to discuss all kinds of topics: politics, business, current events, or the nature of the universe and the divine.
While you're "In the Agora," we hope you find the same diverity of discussion and interaction. In the Agora (ITA) is a weblog created by four writers. "Blog" is short for web log. It's an interactive online journal, with the most recent entry on top. ITA aims to be the Net's best new source for commentary on current events, culture, faith, science and much more. Click here for more information about ITA's authors.
Posted by Joshua Claybourn at November 13, 2004 08:23 AM
Joshua, would you please change your XML feed for this site to full-text? It makes keeping up with your writing via a news aggregator much easier.
Pretty please? grin
Posted by: Gary Petersen at November 14, 2004 11:41 PM | permalink
Address, sometime, who was excluded from the Agora back in the day. The market place of ideas was NOT an Adam Smith deal. There were exclusions for good reasons.
Posted by: Anonymous at November 15, 2004 03:58 AM | permalink
Greek? Ah, I should have known ... and here I thought it had something to do with the new Fur fads this fashion season ...
... kidding aside, looks good Josh ... strike that, looks great. Kudos and best wishes!
Posted by: Mean Dean at November 15, 2004 08:37 AM | permalink
The site looks great, and I'm looking forward to having a number of my regular reads on the same page for once.
I've just got one minor quibble... Only here, I suspect, would I ever be classified next to Hugh Hewitt and Mark Shea. My, my, but that's odd.
In fact, Radley Balko, Jane Galt and I seem to be the only genuine libertarians of the group. What about maybe adding a link to Will Wilkinson, who works for the Cato Institute and writes some very interesting stuff? Or Virginia Postrel perhaps?
Just a thought...
Posted by: Jason Kuznicki at November 15, 2004 11:19 AM | permalink