“Rifles and Rosary Beads”

By |2025-01-18T10:39:19-06:00January 17th, 2025|Categories: Audio/Video, Beauty, Music, Poetry, War|

Rifles and Rosary Beads You hold on to what you need Vicodin, morphine dreams Rifles and Rosary Beads Yellow smoke orange haze Blowin' into my eyes Whistling sunset bombs I couldn't trust the sky Rifles and Rosary Beads You hold on to what you need Vicodin, morphine dreams Rifles, Rosary Beads White knuckles wrapped around [...]

Our Ancient Faith: Lincoln, Democracy, & the American Experiment

By |2025-01-14T18:07:00-06:00January 14th, 2025|Categories: Abraham Lincoln, Books, Civil War, Natural Law, Slavery, War|

Allen Guelzo might very well have had the current state of affairs in his country in mind when he set out to offer this rumination on Abraham Lincoln. It would be hard, if not impossible, to imagine otherwise. Our Ancient Faith: Lincoln, Democracy, and the American Experiment, by Allen C. Guelzo (247 pages, Knopf, 2024) [...]

The Conversion of Death & the Lifegiving Power of Beauty

By |2025-01-10T13:39:32-06:00January 10th, 2025|Categories: Beauty, Catholicism, Death, Imagination, Joseph Pearce, Senior Contributors, War, World War I|

The positive secular reviews that have come in for my off-Broadway verse drama, "Death Comes for the War Poets," show the power of art to touch hearts even in enemy territory, in the secular art community of New York City, that most “woke” of communities in that most “woke” of cities. This shows the evangelizing [...]

“The Man in the High Castle”: The Uses of Alternative History

By |2025-01-09T16:53:38-06:00January 9th, 2025|Categories: Culture, Film, Freedom, History, Patriotism, Timeless Essays, World War II|

Ridley Scott’s TV adaptation of Phillip K. Dick’s The Man in the High Castle came to Amazon in November, and bluntly put, it’s a horrifying ten hours. The premise says it all: What if the Allies had lost World War II? We see America divided between a Nazi regime in the east and a Japanese empire [...]

A Righteous War: How America’s World War II Soldiers Saved Civilization

By |2025-01-27T11:56:03-06:00December 6th, 2024|Categories: Just War, Military, Stephen M. Klugewicz, War, World War II|

Historical revisionists have recently disparaged the righteousness of America's role in World War II, overlooking that the fact the conflict was both a defensive war and a crusade for the liberation of oppressed peoples. We Americans are justified in celebrating it as "The Good War" fought by the Greatest Generation this country has ever produced. [...]

A Reading of the Gettysburg Address

By |2024-11-18T18:08:52-06:00November 18th, 2024|Categories: Abraham Lincoln, Alexis de Tocqueville, American Republic, Civil War, Declaration of Independence, E.B., Essential, Eva Brann, In Honor of Eva Brann at 90 Series, Senior Contributors, St. John's College, Timeless Essays|

Liberal education ought to be less a matter of becoming well-read than a matter of learning to read well, of acquiring arts of awareness, the interpretative or “trivial” arts. Some works, written by men who are productive masters of these arts, are exemplary for their interpretative application. Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address is such a text. Liberal [...]

“An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge”

By |2024-11-16T16:02:35-06:00November 16th, 2024|Categories: Civil War, Literature|

A man stood upon a railroad bridge in northern Alabama, looking down into the swift water twenty feet below. The man's hands were behind his back, the wrists bound with a cord. A rope closely encircled his neck. It was attached to a stout cross-timber above his head and the slack fell to the level [...]

The Last Great Englishman: Arthur Wellesley

By |2024-10-24T17:51:18-05:00October 24th, 2024|Categories: Books, Europe, Featured, History, M. E. Bradford, The Imaginative Conservative, Timeless Essays, War|

The Duke of Wellington was an exemplar of an older England—an England bound by blood, not interest. He affirmed the very English equality of manhood, which comes with honorable service in the line, the rule that he who is with the king on St. Crispin’s Day shall be by him called “brother.” The Great Duke, [...]

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 [...]

The Treasures That Free Men Possess

By |2024-10-13T21:18:42-05:00October 13th, 2024|Categories: Primary Documents, Timeless Essays, World War II|

Kinship among nations is not determined in such measurements as proximity, size, and age. Rather, we should turn to those inner things, those intangibles that are the real treasures free men possess. To preserve his freedom of worship, his equality before the law, his liberty to speak and act as he sees fit, subject only [...]

The Minor Incident That Sparked the Peloponnesian War

By |2024-08-21T17:06:12-05:00August 21st, 2024|Categories: Christopher Morrissey, History, Senior Contributors, Thucydides, Timeless Essays, War|

The Peloponnesian War is an example of how, if not properly managed, a small crisis can spiral out of control and eventually into a full-blown war. The Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC) was actually the second war fought between Athens and Sparta in the fifth century. Why did hostilities break out into the open again? The [...]

“Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero”

By |2024-07-04T21:50:51-05:00July 4th, 2024|Categories: Audio/Video, Film, War, World War I|

Strikingly traditional and patriotic, "Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero" is truly a film for all ages. It is at first surprising that it was a box-office flop when it premiered in 2018, in the 100th anniversary year of the end of the Great War it depicts, despite generally positive reviews by critics and moviegoers. But [...]

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 [...]

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