The Commonality of Freedoms

By |2023-02-22T11:35:22-06:00February 22nd, 2023|Categories: Civil Society, Free Speech, Freedom, Freedom of Religion, Politics|

The assault on religious freedom is not occurring in a vacuum. Freedoms of speech and association have also come under siege. These attacks prove a more general truth: that freedom is interconnected; when one basic freedom is undermined, all freedoms are undermined. On the culture-and-religion front, so much has changed over the past three and [...]

Grover Cleveland: A Man of Iron

By |2023-11-08T18:56:44-06:00February 7th, 2023|Categories: Books, History, Presidency|

Biographer Troy Senik insists that though Grover Cleveland’s was not a “great presidency,” his subject is “one of our greatest presidents." And it is the fundamental soundness of Cleveland's character that goes a good deal of the way toward explaining why this might well be so. A Man of Iron: The Turbulent Life and Improbable [...]

A Backwards Civilization: Unthinking Leaders, Frenzied Citizens

By |2023-02-07T17:08:49-06:00February 7th, 2023|Categories: Civil Society, Civilization, Democracy, Featured, Meno, Modernity, Plato, Political Philosophy, Politics, Socrates, Timeless Essays|

In America today, we are living in a toxic political climate that is the product of a very dangerous combination: Our rulers lack the learning necessary to ask the kinds of deep and fundamental questions that leaders and lawgivers ought to make a habit of pondering, while our people rebelliously scrutinize all orthodoxies and impose [...]

Conservatism Stands for the Common Person

By |2023-02-07T16:58:58-06:00February 6th, 2023|Categories: Conservatism, Populism|

The left has mischaracterized conservatism for nearly a century, and the left’s hold on the media has entrenched this distortion. But conservatism now possesses a prime opportunity to break free of this mischaracterization. In contrast to the left’s creed of division and anger, conservatism can become the voice of joy and gratitude. Populism has acquired [...]

Escaping the Cave of Liberalism

By |2023-08-19T08:50:35-05:00February 5th, 2023|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Humanum, Liberalism, New Polity, Philosophy, Theology|

D.C. Schindler's "The Politics of the Real" is a brilliant addition to the postliberal movement. By understanding liberalism as a distortion of the Christian order, we can recognize it as a sustained war upon reality. And we can understand a true postliberalism as nothing more or less than the New Evangelization, the effort of converting entire [...]

Remembering Ronald Reagan’s Compassion

By |2023-02-05T19:54:32-06:00February 5th, 2023|Categories: Barbara J. Elliott, Charity, Politics, Ronald Reagan, Timeless Essays|

Ronald Reagan had a deep and abiding faith in the prudence and wisdom of people at the grass roots level to manage their own lives well, if left free from government intrusion. Is the government an appropriate venue for compassion and charity? Reagan’s answer was no. He believed the private sector does a better job. [...]

The Democracy of the Unborn

By |2023-01-30T14:21:36-06:00January 30th, 2023|Categories: Abortion, Conservatism, Edmund Burke, Liberalism, Timeless Essays, Tradition|

Society has been reduced to those living in the present; but in being reduced, it has excluded the democracy of the dead and unborn. We, in the present, must fight for this most obscure of all classes. In the abortion debate, one of the pro-choice arguments is based on the idea of “personhood.” Personhood is [...]

What Is It Now That Conservatives Must Conserve?

By |2023-01-25T10:59:33-06:00January 25th, 2023|Categories: Conservatism, Pat Buchanan, Politics, Russell Kirk, Timeless Essays|

What is the conservative’s role in an America many believe has not only lost its way but seems to be losing its mind? What is it now that conservatives must conserve? In light of the great Patrick J. Buchanan’s just-announced retirement, we are republishing this excellent essay, which first appeared in our pages in 2012. [...]

The Limits of Liberty

By |2023-01-22T21:00:13-06:00January 22nd, 2023|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Civil Society, Freedom, Government, Liberty, Rule of Law, Senior Contributors, Social Order, Timeless Essays|

While the rule of law is an essential public good, the actual number and extent of laws also are important factors in determining whether there will be liberty—and, indeed, the rule of law itself. Moreover, as too much law undermines freedom and its own proper character, it also tears apart the very fabric of the [...]

How a Fairy Tale Prince Became an Anti-Hero

By |2023-01-18T18:18:48-06:00January 18th, 2023|Categories: England, John Horvat, Modernity, Monarchy, Morality|

There is nothing unique in Prince Harry’s story. The same plot applies to all who have walked down the selfish, disastrous road of postmodernity, where every tradition and social structure must be questioned, and every narrative denied. If there is a figure that is not a role model, it is Prince Harry, son of Charles [...]

Integralism and the Common Good

By |2023-01-16T15:28:46-06:00January 16th, 2023|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Christianity, Civil Society, Civilization, Community, Politics|

Just as in the case of the head of a household, the heads of localities and nations must direct their minds first and foremost toward the common good of some specific, limited group of people. Integralism and the Common Good, Volume One:  Family, City, and State, edited by Edmund Waldstein & Peter Kwasniewski (356 pages, [...]

Robert Filmer & the American Experiment

By |2023-06-30T22:55:05-05:00January 9th, 2023|Categories: American Founding, American Republic, Books, John Locke, Monarchy|

It seems unlikely that we can properly understand Lockean liberalism, much less pass an informed judgment upon it, without first meditating deeply upon the nemesis against whom Locke reacted: the divine-right monarchist, Sir Robert Filmer. Patriarcha: The Complete Political Works by Sir Robert Filmer (318 pages, Imperium Press, 2021) By and large, establishment conservatives defend [...]

The Political Philosophy of Joseph Ratzinger

By |2023-01-09T13:13:35-06:00January 9th, 2023|Categories: Catholicism, Modernity, Philosophy, Politics, Pope Benedict XVI, Theology|

Joseph Ratzinger was aware of the central event of modernity, namely the transferal of basic Christian categories from the transcendent order to the political order of this world. Like many classically trained German scholars, Joseph Ratzinger was learned in many spheres of knowledge. He displayed a considerable familiarity with those areas in which he did [...]

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