From Mother England to Uncle Sam: An English American Ponders the Fourth of July

By |2016-07-04T01:02:54-05:00July 3rd, 2014|Categories: Declaration of Independence, England, Family, Featured, Joseph Pearce|

Can an Englishman ever be an American? It is a simple enough question, to which, perhaps, there is ultimately a simple enough answer: Yes or no. The problem is that the simple answer begins as a tougher question: Yes or no? And this question is difficult to answer because it raises further questions. What exactly [...]

The Imaginary Abe Lincoln

By |2016-07-04T01:02:56-05:00March 15th, 2013|Categories: Abraham Lincoln, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Featured, Federalist Papers, Joseph Sobran|

Abraham Lincoln Harry Jaffa says Jack Kemp and I have been conducting an “uncivil war” over Abraham Lincoln’s character. Well, for my part, I deny it. Kemp called me one of the current “assassins of Lincoln’s character,” which I thought was a little rabid, inasmuch as I had given Lincoln praise as well [...]

History of States’ Rights, 1774-1817

By |2022-01-06T22:47:12-06:00February 7th, 2013|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Bradley J. Birzer, Charles Carroll, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Featured, Federalist Papers, Forrest McDonald|

Americans, as brothers and descendants of Englishmen, were entitled to the rights inherited from the English through the development of Anglo-Saxon common law and through the several political battles. On the eve of the American Revolution, most American thinkers had embraced the idea of all rights (and, therefore, sovereignty) being inherited.[1] Americans, as brothers and [...]

The Right to Happiness

By |2019-12-26T11:25:10-06:00December 16th, 2012|Categories: Christianity, Declaration of Independence, Featured, Fr. James Schall, Happiness, Rights|Tags: |

An amusing citation from Margaret Thatcher reads: “The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people’s money.” The socialists, however, were not the only ones who would run out of other people’s money. Democracies are quite capable of duplicating this feat.

 The question is this: What entitles us to acquire other [...]

Equality: Commitment or Ideal?

By |2020-07-02T10:40:31-05:00August 20th, 2012|Categories: Abraham Lincoln, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Featured, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Politics, Willmoore Kendall|Tags: |

The whole case for our commitment to equality as a national goal comes from an isolated phrase—”all men are created equal”—in the Declaration of Independence. Was Lincoln right in his exposition of this phrase in the Gettysburg Address? The idea is as old, of course, as that magical first sentence of the Gettysburg Address: “Fourscore [...]

M.E. Bradford’s Constitutional Theory: A Southern Conservative’s Affirmation of The Rule of Law

By |2016-07-04T01:03:01-05:00May 4th, 2012|Categories: American Founding, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Featured, M. E. Bradford, Political Science Reviewer, Republicanism, Southern Agrarians|

A Better Guide Than Reason: Studies in the American Revolution. (La Salle, IL: Sherwood Sugden & Company Publishers, 1979). Cited in the text as Guide. Remembering Who We Are: Observations of a Southern Conservative. (Athens, GA: The University of Georgia Press, 1985). Cited in the text as Remembering. A Worthy Company: The Dramatic Story of [...]

The Declaration and the Constitution: Beauty and the Beholder

By |2016-10-23T10:30:28-05:00December 26th, 2011|Categories: American Founding, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Featured, John Willson, Politics|

Beauty, n.  The power by which a woman charms a lover and terrifies a husband. –Ambrose Bierce My Imprimis arrived today.  It is “The Unity and Beauty of the Declaration and the Constitution,” an interview of Dr. Larry Arnn, President of Hillsdale College, by Peter Robinson of the Hoover Institution.  The full interview can be viewed here.  It is a remarkable [...]

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