The Old-Fashioned Art of Visiting

By |2023-08-18T18:02:26-05:00September 6th, 2022|Categories: Civil Society, Culture, Literature, Mitchell Kalpakgian, Timeless Essays, Tradition|

Social visits are done for their own sake, for disinterested reasons, for the pleasure of others, and as a gracious act of thoughtfulness that dignifies both the visitor and the visited. In the novels of Louisa May Alcott, a time prior to the invention of the telephone, and even into the middle of the twentieth [...]

Don’t Talk to Your Children

By |2022-08-29T10:22:13-05:00August 29th, 2022|Categories: Civil Society, Education, Family, Truth|

Our kids don’t need arguments, they need a childhood. They need to have their healthy imaginations nourished and their innate prejudices in favor of truth, beauty, and goodness affirmed. It’s hard to be a kid these days. Your blue-haired teachers appear on Libs of Tik-Tok videos bragging about selling you into sex slavery, and people [...]

America Faces Problems That Refuse to Be Left Behind

By |2023-08-21T18:26:39-05:00August 28th, 2022|Categories: American Republic, Civil Society, John Horvat, Senior Contributors|

The American system is breaking down, forcing us to confront the problems that refuse to be left behind. But we can handle this crisis. All it takes is a change in perspective, embracing Christ’s Cross. The philosopher George Santayana (1863–1952) once observed that we Americans don’t solve problems: We leave them behind. If there’s an [...]

Ernst Jünger’s “The Glass Bees” & Our Dystopian Present

By |2022-08-17T16:22:26-05:00August 17th, 2022|Categories: Civil Society, Fiction, Literature, Science, Technology|

In our protean age of artificial intelligence, biotechnology, and virtual reality, Ernst Jünger’s uncanny vision of a dystopian world dominated by the machinations of high tech seems strikingly prescient. “The secret force behind technology appears to be the intention to make things insipid. The flower without fragrance is its emblem.” ~Nicolás Gómez Dávila When Ernst [...]

When People Greeted Each Other With Courtesy & Purpose

By |2022-07-24T15:36:16-05:00July 24th, 2022|Categories: Christianity, Civil Society, Civilization, Community, John Horvat|

A greeting is an act of humility and a gesture of justice, in which we give respect and honor due to others for who they are. Indeed, greetings constitute the fragrant perfume of a Christian civilization in which these things are valued. We live in brutal times without transitions. Everything must be instant and rushed, [...]

Is There a Future for ‘Chitchat’ Checkouts?

By |2022-03-14T08:13:02-05:00March 13th, 2022|Categories: Civil Society, Community, Economics, John Horvat|

With so much buying happening online or through self-service kiosks, the art of shopping has lost much of its attraction. Some market-savvy executives have noticed this shortcoming and have recently introduced slow checkouts, which turn the routine chore into a meaningful experience. With so much buying happening online or through self-service kiosks, the art of [...]

Unity and Cancel Culture

By |2022-01-22T14:08:08-06:00January 22nd, 2022|Categories: Christianity, Civil Society, Dwight Longenecker, Senior Contributors|

When the headlines scream that a politician or church leader is being “divisive,” and the thought police, educators, and culture warriors demand “inclusivity,” it should cause a pause for thought. What exactly is “inclusivity” and what causes division? Inclusivity is the desire and demand for a unity (and therefore peace) in a nation or population. [...]

Resentment and the Gang of Gollums

By |2022-01-08T12:05:25-06:00January 8th, 2022|Categories: Civil Society, Community, Dwight Longenecker, Morality, Senior Contributors|

If you want to understand 98% of the unhappiness in the world — whether it is on the stage of international politics or the stage of your kitchen or bedroom, or wherever your arguments happen—consider the roots of resentment. By resentment I mean something quite dark within the human heart. This heart of darkness is [...]

The Marxist Worldview Behind the Spending Bill

By |2024-09-16T17:20:07-05:00November 28th, 2021|Categories: Civil Society, Economics, Government, Ideology, John Horvat, Karl Marx|

Government programs cannot restore broken families and shattered communities. Only a moral regeneration of non-economic values can do this. The ravages of loneliness, despair, and suicide must be addressed by filling the spiritual voids that haunt people’s lives—and not by issuing government checks. The fight over the latest spending package is raging. Democrats are intent [...]

Franklin Pierce, Political Protest, & the Dilemmas of Democracy

By |2021-11-22T14:23:22-06:00November 22nd, 2021|Categories: American Republic, Christianity, Civil Society, Civilization, Constitution, Democracy, Government, History, Ordered Liberty, Political Philosophy, Religion, Timeless Essays|

Franklin Pierce’s suspicions reflected a tension within the antebellum Democratic Party in relation to slavery—how can we reconcile an advocacy of democratic decision-making with the existence of transcendent moral values, the Constitution with the Bible? On the stump in New Boston, New Hampshire in early January 1852, Franklin Pierce gave a long oration during which [...]

How Metaphysics Can Fix This American Mess

By |2021-10-17T16:45:48-05:00October 17th, 2021|Categories: American Republic, Civil Society, Civilization, John Horvat|

As American society reaches its final stages of decay, the price of denying reality will prove ever greater, awakening people to their folly and ruin. A metaphysical crisis of vast proportions awaits a world that has long ignored existential questions to its peril. These are anti-metaphysical times. Most people don’t realize it because they know [...]

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