About John Willson

John Willson is a Senior Contributor at The Imaginative Conservative. He is professor of history emeritus, Hillsdale College. His work has been published in Modern Age, Imprimis, and the University Bookman, and he contributed to Reflections on the French Revolution. Dr. Willson is past President of the Philadelphia Society.

Idéologie

By |2017-07-14T11:41:10-05:00April 19th, 2011|Categories: Culture, Ideology, John Willson|

Brad Birzer’s essays of two of Russell Kirk’s many warnings against the evils of ideology and Steve Masty’s pertinent questions prompt me to offer the following thoughts. About a decade ago, just after the 9/11 horrors, our colleague Robert Eden sent an email to the Hillsdale College faculty offering “some basic distinctions as we sort [...]

“Camelot School” Survives

By |2017-07-10T14:52:49-05:00April 11th, 2011|Categories: John Willson, Leadership, Politics, Presidency|

I watched the entire series, “The Kennedys.” As someone who has a sound understanding of human nature (that is to say, a Christian understanding) I was never particularly attracted to what historian Thomas Reeves calls “The Camelot School” of Kennedy historiography, nor particularly repelled by it. Anybody who is surprised by occasional flashes of virtue [...]

The Next Time You’re in New Hampshire

By |2017-06-27T16:51:23-05:00March 28th, 2011|Categories: John Willson, Politics|

Live a little. Unbuckle your seat belt. It’s the only state left where you can “un-click it and not ticket.” The other 49 have either primary or secondary seat belt laws. “Secondary” means that the gendarmes cannot pull you over only for failure to buckle; they can cite you for not wearing the device, but only if [...]

The War for Libyan Oil: In the Tradition

By |2017-06-27T16:30:47-05:00March 25th, 2011|Categories: Foreign Affairs, John Willson|

Forrest MacDonald First of all, let’s agree on one important point: We are at war in Libya. All the niceties and all the casuistry aside, we are spending $100 million a day bombing and equipping and sending ground troops (yes, we are, folks–2500 Marines so far); enough to have already wiped out the [...]

Kirk: A For­eign Pol­icy for (Prob­a­bly Not Very Many) Amer­i­cans

By |2017-06-27T15:23:03-05:00March 14th, 2011|Categories: Books, Foreign Affairs, John Willson, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

“Men of Kalidu, the cen­turies look down upon you!” So cried His Ex­cel­lency, Man­fred Ar­cane, Min­is­ter With­out Port­fo­lio to his Might­i­ness Achmet XI, Hered­i­tary Pres­i­dent of Hamnegri and Sul­tan in Kalidu. This day the wise and vir­tu­ous Min­is­ter, con­fi­den­tial ser­vant to the heroic Monarch, ex­horted the cap­tains of hun­dreds and of fifties and of tens, [...]

How to Teach: The Remarkable Mr. Frost

By |2017-06-27T13:02:50-05:00March 10th, 2011|Categories: Featured, John Willson, Liberal Learning, Peter Stanlis, Robert Frost|

Education by poetry is education by metaphor.—Robert Frost Robert Frost The older I get the more I am convinced that a young teacher can learn almost everything he needs to know about teaching by reading Robert Frost. He once said that “the three strands of my life” were “writing, teaching, and farming.” He [...]

Too Far Gone in Decadence? Mixed Signals

By |2017-06-27T11:37:43-05:00March 5th, 2011|Categories: Culture, John Willson|

Dr. Bernard Nathanson On Palm Sunday in 1972 a Michigan Congress for the Unborn met on the Detroit waterfront. Russell Kirk, who had argued for several years that “a people who demand the inalienable right to destroy their own young are far gone in decadence,” gave an address that was quite ignored by [...]

How to Become a Pessimist

By |2017-06-23T15:37:29-05:00December 16th, 2010|Categories: John Willson, Morality|Tags: |

A long-time colleague of mine used to say, rather often, “John, you are so hopeful.” He didn’t mean it as a compliment. Another colleague once told me that he had just seen the ultimate conservative bumper-sticker: “LOSING SLOWLY.” The wickedly funny Ambrose Bierce (in The Devil’s Dictionary) defines “pessimism” as “The philosophy forced upon the convictions [...]

Creepy & Creeping Socialism

By |2022-03-30T11:39:31-05:00November 30th, 2010|Categories: John Willson, Socialism|

Back when this man was President of the USA the term “creeping socialism” was known (and, one suspects, understood) by most Americans who were capable of waking up in the morning. Ike didn’t invent the term—that honor goes to F.A. Hayek in his what was then recent book, The Road to Serfdom; but Ike used it, knowing in [...]

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