The Blessings of Capitalism

By |2020-01-02T15:09:59-06:00June 2nd, 2017|Categories: Aristotle, Brian Domitrovic, Capitalism, Democracy, Economics, Science, Technology, Virtue|

Capitalism offers us outstanding new ways to be good. As a civilization, we should concentrate on taking advantage of these remarkable opportunities rather than entertaining idle suggestions, born of intellectual confusion if not sloth and envy, that the great boon of capitalistic plenty is undesirable or an illusion… Around the year 1885, the American economy [...]

Has America Lost Control of Her Destiny?

By |2020-03-07T17:04:48-06:00May 15th, 2017|Categories: American Republic, Democracy, Donald Trump, Featured, Foreign Affairs, History, Pat Buchanan, Politics, War|

With the New World Order and global democracy having been abandoned as America’s great goals, what is the new goal of U.S. foreign policy? What is the strategy to achieve it? Does anyone know? For the World War II generation, there was clarity. The attack on Pearl Harbor, Dec 7, 1941, united the nation as [...]

The Death-Knell of Democracy?

By |2017-08-04T14:43:55-05:00May 9th, 2017|Categories: Democracy, Donald Trump, Featured, Foreign Affairs, Pat Buchanan, Politics|

Democracy requires common ground on which all can stand, but that ground is sinking beneath our feet, and democracy may be going down the sinkhole with it… “You all start with the premise that democracy is some good. I don’t think it’s worth a darn. Churchill is right. The only thing to be said for [...]

Is America Devolving Into Soft Totalitarianism?

By |2021-08-08T15:45:27-05:00April 30th, 2017|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Bruce Frohnen, Democracy, Democracy in America, Featured, Free Speech, Politics|

Alexis de Tocqueville believed that Americans had cause to fear in their leaders, not “tyrants, but rather tutors.” Democratic individualism would cause men to pursue vulgar pleasures and material well-being. Such men would surrender their self-government and even their self-will, and society would eventually devolve into mere savagery. What should a democratic people fear in [...]

Edmund Burke and the Totalitarianism of Democracy

By |2020-07-27T01:19:01-05:00April 17th, 2017|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Democracy, Edmund Burke, Edmund Burke series by Bradley Birzer|

For the “hive” that is the democratic mindset, the very spirit of democracy pushes its adherents to surmount limits, and to behave as one man with the will of a god. Writing of France in 1790, Edmund Burke asked exactly how one might categorize the revolutionary government. Is it a monarchy of the democracy, a [...]

Should the Filibuster Go?

By |2017-04-09T18:24:14-05:00April 9th, 2017|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Congress, Democracy, Government, History, Politics|

We Americans are no longer members of a consensual society, devoted to limited government and the rule of law. So, is the filibuster still a guardian of our freedoms?… After eight years of the most radical President in American history, our “fundamentally transformed” nation can no longer afford to allow use of the filibuster for [...]

Remembering Alexis de Tocqueville

By |2022-02-23T10:14:59-06:00January 15th, 2017|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy, Democracy in America, Featured, Timeless Essays, Tyranny|

The rule of democratic tyranny, Tocqueville held, “reduces each nation to nothing more than a herd of timid and industrious animals of which the government is the shepherd”… Today’s offering in our Timeless Essay series affords readers the opportunity to join Patrick Deneen as he traces Alexis de Tocqueville’s argument concerning the American tendency towards majoritarianism [...]

The High Tory Tradition: An Alternative Future for America?

By |2017-01-20T23:02:56-06:00December 7th, 2016|Categories: Democracy, Featured, Foreign Affairs, Government, Political Philosophy|

The current generation may always consider itself to be the wisest of all, but High Tory politics strives to avoid the perennial folly of this prejudice... “The next wave of American ‘conservatism’ is not likely to base its appeal on such unsuccessful slogans as the Constitution and free enterprise. Its leader will not be a [...]

Our Age of Anxiety: Surviving Political Realignment

By |2016-12-28T07:45:18-06:00October 17th, 2016|Categories: Democracy, Democracy in America, Featured, Gleaves Whitney, Information Age, Politics, Presidency, Technology|

In 2016 Americans are feeling anxious. It’s not that we are experiencing crises—we are neither in total war nor economic depression. Yet 2016 has forced us to rethink all we thought we knew. A Socialist made a credible run for the Democratic nomination and succeeded in moving the Democratic Party platform farther left than it [...]

Does the Mainstream Media Still Shape Public Opinion?

By |2016-10-14T20:34:15-05:00September 18th, 2016|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Democracy, Donald Trump, Featured, History, Journalism, Politics, Presidency|

Never has anyone ruled on this earth by basing his rule on any other thing than public opinion. In these words, Jose Ortega y Gassett, most famous for a book entitled Revolt of the Masses, affirmed the eternal truth and problem of rule by consent. Ortega y Gassett, a classical liberal theorist from Spain, spent [...]

John Adams on the Passion for Distinction in Society

By |2021-10-29T11:26:17-05:00September 14th, 2016|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Civil Society, Democracy, Featured, John Adams, Liberty, Monarchy, Politics, Social Order|

The first task of the wise legislator in his effort to regulate emulation is to actively conduct the passion toward politically useful objects and thereby place the passion "on the side of virtue." Political Architecture: The Natural Order of the Many A full understanding of the passion for distinction requires that we look at man [...]

Is the United States a Republic or a Democracy?

By |2016-09-16T17:35:42-05:00August 10th, 2016|Categories: American Republic, Bruce Frohnen, Democracy, Featured|

I was reminded recently of the ongoing debate over the nature of democracy. The occasion was my rereading of Claes Ryn’s Democracy and the Ethical Life. In this classic work Prof. Ryn criticizes those who insist that democracy is merely a means for discerning the will of the people. This view, he argues, leads naturally to the [...]

Why New England Democracy Disappeared

By |2021-05-19T11:45:34-05:00April 27th, 2016|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy, Featured, George Stanciu, Government, History, Modernity, St. John's College|

One day my fourteen-year-old daughter came home from her part-time job at the Goffstown New Hampshire Public Library and announced at dinner that she had volunteered me to serve as a Library Trustee. Two weeks later, I received a call from Mrs. Woodbury, the Town Clerk. She informed me that I could not run for [...]

Plato’s Tale of the Wolf-Tyrant: A Lesson for Our Times?

By |2016-05-14T10:50:44-05:00April 6th, 2016|Categories: Christopher Morrissey, Democracy, Featured, Plato, Socrates, Tyranny|

How can the wealthiest people make democracies worse? Plato investigates the question in Book VIII of the Republic. Socrates suggests there that, in pursuit of more and more wealth, oligarchic citizens within the democracy will exploit the lower economic classes, even to the point of undermining their own oligarchic economic interests. In other words, the [...]

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