Howard Zinn & a Real People’s History of the United States

By |2024-07-07T17:23:05-05:00October 20th, 2013|Categories: American Republic, Books, History|

Countless examples of unacknowledged efforts of little platoons pulsate in U.S. history, waiting to be uncovered and lifted to eminence in Americans’ consciousness. And though Howard Zinn fails to place his finger on the genuine accomplishments of these little platoons, he has at least watered the seeds for a real people’s history of the United [...]

Novels by State: A Southern Reply

By |2023-01-15T12:32:21-06:00October 19th, 2013|Categories: Sean Busick, South|Tags: |

Business Insider caused a sensation with its list “The Most Famous Book Set In Every State.” And when we say “sensation,” we mean “shock and anger.” While some of their picks are obvious, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz for Kansas or To Kill a Mockingbird for Alabama, others provoked more consternation. Does Louisiana deserve to [...]

Counterfeiting Conservatism

By |2013-10-25T11:02:24-05:00October 19th, 2013|Categories: Conservatism, Michael Oakeshott|Tags: , |

Michael Oakeshott Conservatism is the “ism” that came into being to resist the existence of “isms.” This makes for potentially insurmountable challenges: How to evince a political belief that avoids the rigidity of ideology? Can one take a political position without becoming a political program? Can the principled stand against a politics based [...]

“Quantitative Judgments Don’t Apply”: Foyle’s War, Series Seven

By |2014-01-12T15:16:42-06:00October 18th, 2013|Categories: Daniel McInerny, Mystery, Television|

At the beginning of the third volume of Evelyn Waugh’s masterful World War II trilogy, Sword of Honor, Guy Crouchback, a British Catholic officer entering a disillusioned middle age, has a conversation with his elderly father in which he disparages the Lateran Treaty. Gervase Crouchback rebukes his son’s irascibility. “My dear boy,” he said, “you’re [...]

Advice to My Son: Be a True Conservative

By |2018-12-09T08:42:11-06:00October 17th, 2013|Categories: Conservatism, Louis Markos|Tags: |

I encourage you, my son, to be a conservative but not in the narrowly political sense. Neither the Republicans nor the Democrats embody the fullness of true conservatism, and I have no desire here to give you partisan advice. I want to draw you to something deeper, a way of life that is grounded in [...]

Is Our Guardian Angel Big Brother?

By |2014-01-14T19:52:30-06:00October 17th, 2013|Categories: Government, Pat Buchanan, Politics|

“Gentlemen do not read each other’s mail,” said Secretary of State Henry Stimson of his 1929 decision to shut down “The Black Chamber” that decoded the secret messages of foreign powers. “This means war!” said FDR, after reading the intercepted instructions from Tokyo to its diplomats the night of Dec. 6, 1941. Roosevelt’s secretary of [...]

Insights on the Government Shutdown from Thucydides

By |2015-05-19T23:18:57-05:00October 16th, 2013|Categories: Books, Classics, Robert M. Woods, Thucydides|Tags: |

And if we should know what government is, we should observe, in Thucydides' laconic account of the revolution at Corcyra, what happens when it fails.– Stringfellow Barr Most keen observers would say that our government has been in failure mode for a number of decades, and this is not easily refuted on empirical grounds. Readers of [...]

How Can We Transmit the Permanent Things?

By |2016-07-06T15:41:29-05:00October 16th, 2013|Categories: Permanent Things, Russell Kirk|Tags: |

Education and the Permanent Things If we are going to transmit the permanent things, we will have to put back into education the moral and metaphysical vision that is foundational to Western education and Western civilization. I hope to illustrate this thesis by discussing Russell Kirk’s vision of conservatism and the permanent things, by describing [...]

Whose Will Shall Rule?

By |2019-03-21T11:46:31-05:00October 15th, 2013|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Constitution, Politics, Supreme Court|Tags: |

For decades, now, the universe of constitutional interpretation has been divided into “textualists,” who argue that the document must be read according to the reasonable meaning of its words, and those who argue for a “living” constitution, the meaning of which can “grow” over time to “meet the needs of a changing people and nation.” [...]

A Requiem for Manners

By |2023-08-20T14:08:28-05:00October 15th, 2013|Categories: Culture, Stephen M. Klugewicz|Tags: , |

Today the idea that the cultivation of manners should be an essential part of one’s education has been nearly lost. Indeed, evidence of the demise of manners is all around us, and thus we should be well aware that one of the main pillars of civilization is crumbling. On April 9, 1865, General Robert E. [...]

Bachman & Audubon: A Scholarly Friendship

By |2013-12-20T15:39:01-06:00October 15th, 2013|Categories: Books, Sean Busick|

Had I the Wings: The Friendship of Bachman & Audubon, by Jay Shuler Jay Shuler’s Had I the Wings is unusual in that it focuses not on an individual or an event, but on a friendship. Together, with the assistance of their families, John Bachman and John Audubon produced two of the seminal works of [...]

Russell Kirk’s Imaginative Conservatism: “The Conservative Mind” at Sixty

By |2014-01-17T08:39:26-06:00October 14th, 2013|Categories: Conservatism, Russell Kirk, The Conservative Mind|Tags: |

Ronald Reagan and Russell Kirk (This is one of a series The Imaginative Conservative is publishing in honor of the sixtieth anniversary of Russell Kirk’s The Conservative Mind. Essays in the series may be found here.) President Barack Obama’s decisive electoral victory last November caused panic in some conservative circles. Questions about the continuing relevance [...]

Voegelin: Modernity and Gnosticism

By |2014-01-10T19:15:39-06:00October 14th, 2013|Categories: Eric Voegelin, Modernity|Tags: , |

Photo by Felipe Vanancio Eric Voegelin (1901-85) is often portrayed as one of the severest critics of modernity–its belief in human reason’s ability to understand and convey the fundamental structures of reality and its dismissal of transcendent teleologies as private and suspect beliefs. For Voegelin, modernity was a “Gnostic revolt” against reality: the [...]

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