HBO’s “Chernobyl” & Solzhenitsyn

By |2024-08-12T16:00:56-05:00August 12th, 2024|Categories: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Civilization, Communism, Culture, History, Ideology, Television, Timeless Essays|

The HBO series “Chernobyl” serves to warn us about the danger of persistent lies in a society that refuses to acknowledge truth. It would be a grave error not to take stock of our own tendencies toward deceit, as if our lies are radically different from those that underpinned the Soviet Union. Over several long [...]

Conservative Humanism & the Challenge of the Post-Humanist Age

By |2024-08-10T14:53:31-05:00August 10th, 2024|Categories: Christian Humanism, Conservatism, Humanism and Conservatism, Philosophy, Politics, Timeless Essays|

Since humanism has been the core of the Western tradition through the centuries, the emergence of anti-humanism and post-humanism represents an inflection point of our civilizational crisis. In confronting this crisis, conservative humanism aims not to erase the positive achievements of modern humanism, but to graft them back onto their roots where they can draw [...]

Oh, Say! Can You Secede?

By |2024-08-02T16:52:48-05:00August 2nd, 2024|Categories: Books, David Deavel, Politics, Secession, Senior Contributors, Texas|

While Texas secession would indeed mean that it was no longer one of the states in the union, author T.L. Hulsey has bigger fish to fry than merely separating Texas from California, Minnesota, and New York. What he wants is to start again as the Founders did, but better. The Constitution of Non-State Government: Field [...]

Tocqueville and a New Science of Politics

By |2024-07-28T13:58:09-05:00July 28th, 2024|Categories: Alexis de Tocqueville, American Republic, Bradley J. Birzer, Democracy, Democracy in America, Politics, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays|

According to Tocqueville, a new political science must account for both the immediate and the universal, the moment and the eternal. When we fail to understand the choice that God has given us with democracy—that is, a science to guide, attenuate, and hone democracy—the baser instincts will rise to the fore. Tocqueville breaks his own [...]

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 [...]

Eric Hoffer: The Longshoreman Philosopher’s Thought & Work

By |2024-07-18T15:32:34-05:00July 18th, 2024|Categories: Communism, Freedom, Philosophy, Politics, Timeless Essays|

In a time of social and political radicalization, Eric Hoffer remained a free and independent thinker and identified the threat that Marxism posed for citizens. He reflects on human nature, individuality, and the responsibility and duty of thoughtful and informed citizens to upkeep open, democratic societies. Eric Hoffer The American philosopher, Eric Hoffer [...]

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 [...]

Hell Is Getting What You Want

By |2024-07-13T12:41:15-05:00July 13th, 2024|Categories: Freedom, Timeless Essays, Tyranny|

Just as all men recognize tyranny as the most oppressive regime, we should recognize a tyrannical soul as the most onerous. The tyrannical soul gets exactly what it wants, but this is a curse, not a blessing. Freedom from all constraint is actually the worst form of slavery. “A dream is a wish your heart [...]

The Natives Are Restless

By |2024-07-06T10:49:48-05:00July 4th, 2024|Categories: Foreign Affairs, Globalism, Government, Ideology, Joseph Pearce, Populism, Senior Contributors|

Do we not find ourselves living with a scenario in which the liberal elites consider themselves to be the wise, cool minds overseeing and running things. Do they not look upon those who oppose their agenda as being a “savage,” “uncivilized” set of local people, natives, “deplorables”, who must be subordinated to the elite’s will [...]

JFK’s Other Assassination

By |2024-06-30T18:18:51-05:00June 30th, 2024|Categories: Catholicism, Foreign Affairs, History, Joseph Pearce, Presidency, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom, War|

Ngo Dinh Diem, the first President of South Vietnam, and JFK were both Catholics, though Catholics of very different persuasions. Landscape The assassination of President Kennedy on November 22, 1963, was one of the landmark moments and one of the most remembered events in twentieth-century history. The assassination of President Diem of Vietnam [...]

The Loves of Theodore Roosevelt

By |2024-06-24T16:55:37-05:00June 24th, 2024|Categories: Books, History, Presidency, Progressivism, Republicans|

It’s entirely possible to imagine Theodore Roosevelt becoming President of the United States, even a Rushmore-eligible president, with an entirely different set of female loves. But it’s much less likely. The Loves of Theodore Roosevelt: The Women Who Created a President, by Edward F. O’Keefe. (446 pages, Simon and Schuster, 2024) Try as he might, [...]

What Comes After Liberalism?

By |2024-06-19T14:11:09-05:00June 19th, 2024|Categories: Christendom, Christianity, John Horvat, Liberalism|

In the name of liberation from authority, liberalism imposes an amoral, secular, and nonmetaphysical model on nations in which God has no official role. This model entered modernity without being voted upon or chosen by populations. It is an assumed mentality that all must adopt outwardly to be considered part of the modern world. Woe [...]

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