The Political Relevance of St. Augustine

By |2022-02-25T11:54:04-06:00February 25th, 2022|Categories: Aristotle, Christendom, Christianity, Essential, Politics, St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas, Timeless Essays|

St. Augustine observed, “To begin with, there never has been, nor, is there today, any absence of hostile foreign powers to provoke war.” Evil men lusting after power—aggressors—are endemic to human history, and noted Augustine, “When they go to war what they want is to make, if they can, their enemies their own, and then [...]

Russia: Friend or Foe?

By |2022-03-21T14:19:07-05:00February 24th, 2022|Categories: Europe, Foreign Affairs, History, National Security, Politics, Russia|

Russia’s leaders are flawed, inclined toward violence, and covetous of power—but this doesn’t make them much different from the leaders of every other nation-state. On March 10, 2014, American ambassadors from across the globe descended on Washington for our annual conference: a few days to forget about the day-to-day hassles of running embassies and coping [...]

Man, Religion, and Tribalism

By |2022-03-31T21:09:31-05:00February 24th, 2022|Categories: Christianity, Christmas, Foreign Affairs, Joseph Pearce, Religion, Senior Contributors, Timeless Essays, Ukraine|

It is not fair or accurate to describe the struggle between the two warring parties in Ukraine as religious, except in the decidedly irreligious sense of its being a sectarian struggle in which religious affiliation is little more than a badge worn in the service of tribalism. A couple of nights ago, I found myself [...]

The Voice of a Prophet: Solzhenitsyn on the Ukraine Crisis

By |2022-03-31T21:02:55-05:00February 23rd, 2022|Categories: Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, Foreign Affairs, Joseph Pearce, Russia, Ukraine|

Though Solzhenitsyn feared the consequences of an independent Ukraine, he respected the right of the Ukrainian people to secede, a right which they duly exercised as the former Soviet Union unraveled. Reiterating his subsidiarist principles he insisted once again that “only the local population can decide the fate of their locality, of their region.” Alexander [...]

Gerald Ford: A Republic of Laws, Not of Men

By |2022-02-21T12:34:32-06:00February 20th, 2022|Categories: American Republic, Gleaves Whitney, Presidency, Senior Contributors|

Our great Republic is a government of laws and not of men. Here the people rule. But there is a higher Power who ordains not only righteousness but love, not only justice but mercy. President Gerald R. Ford, Remarks at His Swearing-In Ceremony, August 9, 1974 My dear friends, my fellow Americans: The oath that [...]

Anti-Constitutionalism, in the Name of Democracy

By |2022-01-02T15:54:00-06:00January 2nd, 2022|Categories: American Republic, Constitution, Democracy, Politics|

Debate and battles over the health and vitality of our democracy are somewhat normal occurrences in our highly partisan political arena. But those debates and battles should not spill over into the constitutional realm, which serves as the steadying foundation for the U.S. political system. Over the past several years, a steady drumbeat of warnings [...]

The Brilliant Enigma That Was Willmoore Kendall

By |2021-12-27T21:23:07-06:00December 26th, 2021|Categories: Books, Politics, Willmoore Kendall|

Willmoore Kendall's works on political science were pathbreaking and survive the test of time. Even today, it is impossible to understand the equal democratic legitimacy of the presidency and Congress without his “Two Majorities,” or the critical role of local-based political parties without his "American Party System," or how the whole Constitution works to solve [...]

The Marxist Worldview Behind the Spending Bill

By |2024-09-16T17:20:07-05:00November 28th, 2021|Categories: Civil Society, Economics, Government, Ideology, John Horvat, Karl Marx|

Government programs cannot restore broken families and shattered communities. Only a moral regeneration of non-economic values can do this. The ravages of loneliness, despair, and suicide must be addressed by filling the spiritual voids that haunt people’s lives—and not by issuing government checks. The fight over the latest spending package is raging. Democrats are intent [...]

Franklin Pierce, Political Protest, & the Dilemmas of Democracy

By |2021-11-22T14:23:22-06:00November 22nd, 2021|Categories: American Republic, Christianity, Civil Society, Civilization, Constitution, Democracy, Government, History, Ordered Liberty, Political Philosophy, Religion, Timeless Essays|

Franklin Pierce’s suspicions reflected a tension within the antebellum Democratic Party in relation to slavery—how can we reconcile an advocacy of democratic decision-making with the existence of transcendent moral values, the Constitution with the Bible? On the stump in New Boston, New Hampshire in early January 1852, Franklin Pierce gave a long oration during which [...]

Living With Big Brother

By |2021-11-10T16:23:10-06:00November 10th, 2021|Categories: Catholicism, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Tyranny|

Georg Ratzinger in his childhood and youth had seen and experienced the consequences of secular fundamentalism at first hand. He was all too aware that there is precious little difference between the various shades of socialism. Big Brother, by any other name, is an enemy of freedom. On August 21, 2008, Pope Benedict described his [...]

Who Reads Robert Nisbet Anymore?

By |2021-09-29T16:58:25-05:00September 29th, 2021|Categories: Books, Community, Conservatism, Featured, Government, Robert Nisbet, Timeless Essays|

Is Robert Nisbet’s “The Quest for Community” a historical artifact or a living source of wisdom? Has his insight into the natural human desire for community become a moot point in light of the rise of the State, which has replaced the church, family, and neighborhood? Of the many books that Robert Nisbet wrote during [...]

Remembering Michael Novak’s “Democratic Capitalism”

By |2021-09-27T15:18:16-05:00September 27th, 2021|Categories: Books, Bradley J. Birzer, Capitalism, Democracy, Economics, Senior Contributors|

One doesn’t have to agree with everything Michael Novak argued to recognize the genius of the man. Like all true conservatisms, his democratic capitalism was as much an anti-system as anything recognizable as a system. He was a giant of an intellect, and his best book deserves to be remembered, even if in friendly opposition. [...]

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