Charlie Kirk’s Assassination: Turning Point or Breaking Point for America?

By |2025-09-21T17:54:07-05:00September 17th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Culture, John Horvat, Morality, Politics, Senior Contributors, St. Augustine|

Charlie Kirk's assassin symbolizes a subculture of rebellion found in recent shooters: full of dark, video-gaming, and Satanic themes. Indeed, like the biblical Cain, the assassin took his rage against the moral law to the point of killing one who embodied the ideal of that law. The assassination of Charlie Kirk is forcing the nation [...]

Can Transitioning Be Healthcare? A Reflection on Sex as Symbol

By |2025-09-04T17:40:07-05:00September 4th, 2025|Categories: Government, Health, Morality, Nature of God, Nature of Man|

Sexual difference is a symbol of one’s relation to the world, the whole of reality, to all others (and even to oneself), and ultimately to God. Initially, it may seem that the answer to the question that forms the title of this brief reflection would depend on the way one chose to define the first [...]

To Stop School Shootings, We Must Reject Three Liberal Premises

By |2025-09-01T16:26:01-05:00September 1st, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Civil Society, Civilization, Evil, John Horvat, Liberalism, Morality, Senior Contributors|

The Minneapolis killings prove that evil exists and hates good. The act was so heinous that Satan unmasks himself by showing his role in inspiring the shooter's hateful messages against the Catholic Church. Satan is real and working inside the postmodern world despite the liberal premise to the contrary. He showed his fiendish face at [...]

Church and State?

By |2025-08-31T18:30:24-05:00August 31st, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Government, Monarchy, New Polity, Social Order, St. Thomas Aquinas|

I contend that the Middle Ages were neither religious nor secular because the religious and the secular are two features of  a single construction: the modern, Western social architecture of “Church” and “State,” “private” and “public.” The societies of the Middle Ages had a different architecture based on different assumptions and different concepts, ultimately on [...]

Butler: The Untold Story of the Near Assassination of Donald Trump

By |2025-09-01T18:00:55-05:00August 25th, 2025|Categories: Books, Chuck Chalberg, Donald Trump, Politics, Senior Contributors|

Salena Zito's new book is less the story of the assassination attempt on Donald Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, than it is the lengthier story of the 2024 campaign for the presidency. As such, it is also the story of the fight for a piece of America’s heartland, and for a key element of Mr. Trump's [...]

At the Twilight of Civilization

By |2025-08-29T14:19:48-05:00August 23rd, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Philosophy, Political Philosophy, Politics, Western Civilization|

Russell Hittinger’s new book, "On the Dignity of Society," articulates Catholic principles regarding the social order. One of the great themes of the book was the continuity between man’s nature and society. On the Dignity of Society by F. Russell Hittinger Is the history of philosophy full of philosophers rejecting past philosophers? Broadly, this may be [...]

Putting Freedom Above Order

By |2025-08-18T13:56:19-05:00August 18th, 2025|Categories: Christianity, Common Good, Freedom, John Horvat, Liberalism, Senior Contributors, Social Order|

We need a return to Christian order and freedom, with God at its center. Only then will society no longer appear broken, and things will work properly. A general sense that society is broken prevails in America today. Polls show that people are not satisfied with the direction the nation is going. Things and institutions [...]

John Marshall on the Supreme Court & Universal Injunctions

By |2025-08-13T15:28:01-05:00August 13th, 2025|Categories: Constitution, Donald Trump, John Marshall, Rule of Law, Supreme Court|

If we could explain to him what executive orders of a President mean today and what jurisdiction the district courts now have, what would the great John Marshall have said about the Supreme Court’s opinion limiting the power of the district judges to issue universal or nationwide injunctions? Introduction In June, the United States Supreme [...]

A Matter of Politics?

By |2025-07-25T19:24:14-05:00July 25th, 2025|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Cluny, Politics, Prayer|

Why is it that prayer is fundamental to politics? Politics exists to secure the common good. An essential element of the common good is that man should be able to fulfill himself at all levels. The religious level cannot be excluded. The civilization in which we find ourselves makes prayer difficult. The first thing that [...]

How Do We Get Out of Here?

By |2025-07-22T08:38:15-05:00July 21st, 2025|Categories: Books, Donald Trump, Journalism, Politics|

R. Emmett Tyrrell’s short version of American history from the 1960s to the 2020s can essentially be reduced to this: periods of Episodic Chaos followed by periods of Episodic Calm. In his recent book, he asks whether we can finally be free of these alternating historical episodes. How Do We Get Out of Here? by [...]

On Democracies & Death Cults: Israel & the Future of Civilization

By |2025-07-16T15:38:59-05:00July 14th, 2025|Categories: Books, Foreign Affairs, War, Western Civilization|

In the wake of Hamas' attack on Israel, Douglas Murray asks broad questions: “What can Western liberal societies do in the face of such movements? What can people who value life do in the face of those who worship death.” On Democracies and Death Cults: Israel and the Future of Civilization, by Douglas Murray (209 [...]

Why Government Cannot Educate

By |2025-07-18T19:05:07-05:00July 13th, 2025|Categories: Aristotle, Bureaucracy, Christianity, Education, Enlightenment, Family, Government, Liberal Learning, Love, Plato, Progressivism|

Saying that government cannot educate is not a partisan political position, but a simple statement of fact: government cannot educate, because government cannot love. Even more bluntly, government should not even try to run institutions of love, because, slowly but surely, its administrators inevitably pervert them in their desire for security or lust for power. [...]

Under the Southern Cross

By |2025-07-19T14:11:23-05:00July 6th, 2025|Categories: Catholicism, Immigration, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, Unsung Heroes of Christendom|

John Plunkett defended the dignity of the natives of Australia; Caroline Chisholm defended the dignity of vulnerable immigrants to Australia. In doing so, they offer a living witness to the Lord’s commandment that we love our neighbors. Long after European adventurers had first sailed into the mystic West to discover the New World of the Americas, [...]

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