“Philip Dru: Administrator,” a Story of Tomorrow

By |2024-10-23T20:41:18-05:00October 23rd, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Books, History, Politics|

To what extent Colonel Edward House’s novel "Philip Dru" contributed to the Wilsonian transformation of the Democratic party will likely never be known. But we do know that Woodrow Wilson read the book, brought House to the White House, and relied on House for advice and companionship. Philip Dru: Administrator - A Story of Tomorrow, [...]

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 [...]

Voting for a Greater Good

By |2024-10-15T19:20:30-05:00October 15th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Civil Society, Community, Politics|

The upcoming presidential election will determine the next leader of the nation and representative of America to the world. Election Day offers the prospect for a new voice and a new option. The American Solidarity Party fits that description. Its principles and public policy are in quest for the common good. Its political approach, emphasizing [...]

Slavery and Abortion

By |2024-10-10T17:54:52-05:00October 10th, 2024|Categories: Abortion, American Republic, Politics, Slavery|

By linking it to the great moral issue of slavery, perhaps more people will find their way to the position that abortion too should be put on the road to ultimate extinction. If so, it’s possible that subsequent generations of Americans will come to regard our Stephen Douglas-popular sovereignty Republicans as having been on the [...]

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, [...]

Jonathan Edwards: Founding Father of American Political Thought

By |2024-10-04T19:23:58-05:00October 4th, 2024|Categories: American Founding, Freedom, History, Leadership, Philosophy, Plato, Politics, St. Augustine, Timeless Essays|

Jonathan Edwards helped to invent a new America, committed to a national covenant and an unprecedented spiritual egalitarianism. In 1930, the historian Henry Bamford Parkes critically assessed the legacy of America’s most famous Puritan intellectual, Jonathan Edwards. According to Parkes, “it is hardly a hyperbole to say that, if Edwards had never lived, there would [...]

The Tyranny of the Present Moment

By |2024-10-04T10:10:51-05:00October 2nd, 2024|Categories: American Founding, Featured, Federalist Papers, Glenn Arbery, Liberal Learning, Progressivism, Timeless Essays, Tyranny, Wyoming Catholic College|

For the Progressives, checks and balances were merely a hindrance to efficient government. How could it be wrong to act in accordance with the spirit of history? As “experts” replaced statesman, the whole idea of “the consent of the governed” became less important, even a stumbling block for the plans of Progressive reformers. Recently, Wyoming [...]

Harry Jaffa and the Demise of the Old Republic

By |2024-09-26T14:29:39-05:00September 26th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Conservatism, Constitution, Declaration of Independence, Edmund Burke, Featured, Foreign Affairs, History, Political Philosophy, Politics, Timeless Essays, Tradition|

Harry Jaffa’s constitutional history of America’s late-eighteenth-century is not credible nor, in keeping with many of his own pronouncements, is it conservative. The writing of history, as we have learned from authors as diverse as Thucydides, Voltaire, Nietzsche, Butterfield, Collingwood, and Oakeshott can and has been done in strikingly different ways while serving radically different [...]

Marxism: A Primer

By |2024-09-17T16:33:42-05:00September 17th, 2024|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Civilization, Communism, Ideology, Karl Marx, Timeless Essays|

Unlike reality—which is infinitely and ultimately unknowable—Marxism as ideology pretends to understand the world, but, in reality, it offers only the merest shadow of true complexities. Though responsible—directly and indirectly—for the murder of nearly 150 million innocent children, women, and men in the previous century, Marxism is making a comeback in Western civilization. Not only [...]

A Popular Defense of Our Undemocratic Constitution

By |2024-09-16T15:56:06-05:00September 16th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, Constitution, Democracy, Electoral College, Federalism, Federalist Papers, Timeless Essays, Wyoming Catholic College|

If we consider the Founders’ arguments for the Constitution, we find not only that they intended it to be undemocratic, but that they would defend even its most undemocratic elements on “popular” grounds. What might appear to the partisans of democracy today as outdated roadblocks to efficient government are for the Founders politically salutary forms [...]

The Emergence of Political Consciousness: A Week at Boys State, 1964

By |2024-09-13T14:23:42-05:00September 13th, 2024|Categories: Conservatism, Politics|

I suspect that my true “political consciousness” began around the months surrounding mid-1963 to mid-1964 and for reasons you, my patient reader, I hope can understand and share. Can my awareness of what came across the airwaves and was broadcast in black and white on our family television be likened to an emerging “political consciousness?” [...]

“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 [...]

Three Things That Make This Election Cycle Surreal

By |2024-09-08T17:53:45-05:00September 8th, 2024|Categories: American Republic, John Horvat, Politics, Religion|

What makes this election year so strange is a greater shift away from reality. The election seems like a show, not a civic duty. Candidates are more like actors than future public servants. It all seems so staged. Everything is choreographed to improve poll numbers and ignore issues. However, the main reason things are surreal [...]

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