The Second Trump Administration: Back to the Future?

By |2025-01-24T01:24:07-06:00January 19th, 2025|Categories: David Deavel, Donald Trump, Government, Hope, Politics, Presidency, Senior Contributors|

Donald Trump has a second chance, with a much better understanding of how things work in Washington and whom to trust there, to have a transformative presidency. The absurdity is finally over. Almost. The insanity of the national Democrats we have seen over the last four years, particularly since Donald Trump’s November defeat of Kamala [...]

Abolish the Hereditary Lords in the British Parliament?

By |2025-01-08T19:48:51-06:00January 8th, 2025|Categories: England, Equality, Government, Ideology, John Horvat, Liberalism|

The United Kingdom’s Labour Party government is presenting a bill to abolish the hereditary lords from the upper chamber of Parliament. Hereditary lords are those House of Lords’ members who inherit the right to sit in the upper House based on services rendered to the realm. Many storied families have retained this right for generations. [...]

A Big Idea: Reorganizing the 50 States

By |2024-12-19T09:38:36-06:00December 18th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Government, Satire|

It’s morning again in America. Trump has reclaimed the presidency, and a popular vote majority supercharges his mandate. But morning means it’s time to get to work. While we may now be unburdened by the disaster of a Harris administration, big changes are necessary. For the past sixteen years, we’ve heard the fantasies of the [...]

Witnessing to a Bureaucracy That Cannot Love

By |2024-12-12T09:10:30-06:00December 11th, 2024|Categories: Christianity, Civil Society, Culture, Family, Freedom, Government, Love|

The challenge we face today is humanizing a Bureaucratic Regime, just as our ancestors humanized a German warrior regime. We’re in the position of the Apostle Paul, handcuffed to a Praetorian guard. As the Bubble grows more psychotic and inhumane, opportunities for evangelistic kindness and witness multiply exponentially. As we survey our emerging Bureaucratic Regime [...]

Signing of the Mayflower Compact

By |2024-11-21T10:22:25-06:00November 20th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Christianity, Civilization, Government, History, Mayflower Compact, Timeless Essays|

In the name of God, amen. We whose names are under written… [h]aving undertaken for the Glory of God, and advancement of the christian [sic] faith, and the honour of our King and country, a voyage to plant the first colony in the northern parts of Virginia; do by these presents solemnly and mutually, in [...]

A Different Kind of Presidential Cabinet

By |2024-11-17T12:11:42-06:00November 17th, 2024|Categories: Donald Trump, Government, Politics|

Donald Trump was elected to shake things up, to undo the damage that the left has been doing to our society, our culture, and our government. But when you staff a government with entertaining names, how does that affect the cause of effectively changing policy in a more positive, liberty-oriented direction? Pete Hegseth [...]

Trump’s Victory & the True Border Crisis

By |2024-11-10T15:33:18-06:00November 10th, 2024|Categories: Donald Trump, Government, Immigration, Politics|

The triumph of Donald Trump was simply the triumph of the majority of Americans who saw their society slipping into anarchy and chaos without borders. I hope that in the next Trump years, the renewed, common-sense desire for proper borders in every area of life will prevail and will be balanced by that other great [...]

The Basis of International Peace

By |2024-10-19T12:36:37-05:00October 19th, 2024|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Foreign Affairs, Government, Natural Law, Rule of Law, War|

As long as the great powers accept the moral duty of changing an unjust status quo even if it means sacrifice to them, just so long will there be peace. The State in Catholic Thought, by Heinrich A. Rommen, introduction by Bruce Frohnen (Cluny Media, 770 pages) There is no possible evasion of the general principle that [...]

Satisfying the Needs of the Soul

By |2024-10-08T09:06:10-05:00October 7th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Books, Coronavirus, Government, Politics, Timeless Essays|

After the Nazis invaded and occupied France during the Second World War, the Free French, or the French government-in-exile, invited Simone Weil—a political philosopher, Platonist, and mystic—to write a report detailing how to rebuild France once the Nazis took their leave.[1] This, of course, presupposed that the Nazis would eventually depart French soil. In response, [...]

“Fauxtastrophes” and the Power of Bureaucracy

By |2024-09-11T19:24:51-05:00September 11th, 2024|Categories: Government, Science|

Scientism’s prophets began creating “fauxtastrophes,” cosmic pseudo-calamities that would satisfy our irrepressible hunger for transcendence—the natural expectation of divine retribution—and affirm our dependence on their priestly caste. Tattooed Cockney podcaster Russell Brand said it best: “If science and progress are the solution to all our problems, then it’s important that pharmaceutical companies and science more [...]

Is the Democratic Party Democratic?

By |2024-07-23T20:17:45-05:00July 23rd, 2024|Categories: Democracy, Government, Joseph Biden, Liberalism, Politics|

The American Democratic party has not ever been and certainly is not now truly democratic. The process by which President Biden’s apparent disability has been concealed and the method party leaders are using to replace him is more reminiscent of Plato’s lying guardians than it is of Aristotle’s democrats. Introduction The ancient Greeks gave the [...]

Making America Great Again: Orestes Brownson on National Greatness

By |2024-07-16T20:06:32-05:00July 16th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Catholicism, Government, Natural Law, Politics, Religion, Timeless Essays|

It’s time for Orestes Brownson to re-enter our contemporary political discourse, and on the campaign trail to remind us, first, that all just authority is from God, who instituted natural law, and also, that moral authority is not relative. I. The Brownson Revival In 1993 Peter J. Stanlis revisited Orestes Brownson’s political thought by reviewing [...]

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