A Quill Pen for Children at Christmas

By |2016-11-26T09:52:12-06:00December 19th, 2012|Categories: Christmas, Education, Quotation, Stephen Masty|

Eric Christiansen in The Spectator had some interesting things to say in a review of The Missing Ink: The Lost Art of Handwriting (and why it still matters) by Philip Hensher. Enjoy "...something can be done to prepare children for writing beforehand. For example, if you live near a common, poultry market or farm, get them to collect goose feathers. [...]

Cultural Amnesia and the Separation of Church and State

By |2014-12-30T16:42:12-06:00December 19th, 2012|Categories: Bruce Frohnen, Christmas, Constitution, Freedom of Religion|

One of the sadder aspects of Christmas time in America is the display of ignorance on the part of so many Americans regarding the constitutional tradition of our country. Why at Christmas? Because it is at this time of year that we hear the whining call of “that song” or “that play” or “that display” [...]

Teacher: Notes from an Old Professor

By |2015-05-27T13:22:40-05:00December 18th, 2012|Categories: Education, Featured, John Willson|

I was driving into our church parking lot the other day, thinking about a nice essay by Douglas Minson on the 79th anniversary of the repeal of Prohibition. I’m sure glad it happened about seven years before I was born. Anyway, it occurred to me that I had completed an anniversary just a few months [...]

A Very Cato Christmas

By |2014-12-10T10:38:59-06:00December 18th, 2012|Categories: Books, Cato, Christmas, Gifts for Imaginative Conservatives|Tags: |

Now well into the third century since our nation’s birth, imaginative conservatives can’t help but wonder where we might be in the life of the Republic. It is instructive to note that when our Founders were preparing to give birth to our Republic, they were imagining the end of the Roman Republic and pondering how to keep [...]

The Future of Conservatism

By |2014-01-21T12:38:12-06:00December 17th, 2012|Categories: Conservatism, George W. Carey, Politics|Tags: |

A survey of the present American political scene provides, I believe, the background and point of departure for examining more permanent and basic aspects of American institutions and politics that pose enormous obstacles to the realization of principles long associated with traditional conservatism. More specifically the eclipse (some might say the disappearance) of traditional conservatism [...]

Five Compelling Religious Biographies

By |2018-12-21T14:42:24-06:00December 17th, 2012|Categories: Books, Christmas, Conservatism, Gifts for Imaginative Conservatives|Tags: |

People love biographies, and I am regularly asked to recommend good ones during the lead-up to Christmas. One of the most frustrating things about the bookselling business is that there is no necessary correlation between the prominent placement of books at the bookstore, or the review of them in newspapers and magazines, and the enduring [...]

Lord Percy’s The Heresy of Democracy

By |2019-09-05T13:36:21-05:00December 17th, 2012|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christendom, Conservatism, Democracy, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Russell Kirk, Stoicism|

A review of Lord Percy of Newcastle’s, The Heresy of Democracy: A Study in the History of Government (London, 1954). In 1957, Kirk published a list of “must-read” books to understand modern (meaning, as it had developed or been rediscovered in the 1950s) conservatism. His list would not surprise most readers of The Imaginative Conservative, [...]

Macro Follies: Another Reason for Frugal but Loving Holidays

By |2019-11-14T15:20:16-06:00December 17th, 2012|Categories: Audio/Video, Christmas, Stephen Masty|

Are you growing hysterical, buying Christmas presents that you cannot afford in hope of rescuing the economy? (Okay, we didn’t think so). A merry and clever Yuletide video makes the economic point for savings versus Quantitative Easing on a family and national scale, from the creative people who brought us the Keynes and Hayek rap [...]

Literary Imagination

By |2018-12-12T16:24:34-06:00December 17th, 2012|Categories: Andrew Seeley, Books, Conservatism, Film, Gifts for Imaginative Conservatives|Tags: |

William Lee Miller’s complementary books, Lincoln’s Virtues and The President: The Duty of a Statesman, are a rare combination of historical investigation and moral reflection presented in comfortable prose filled with real world insight. The Publisher’s Review excerpt from the Amazon site is right on: Margaret Whalen Turner’s Attolia series makes a great gift for those who know nothing can [...]

The Right to Happiness

By |2019-12-26T11:25:10-06:00December 16th, 2012|Categories: Christianity, Declaration of Independence, Featured, Fr. James Schall, Happiness, Rights|Tags: |

An amusing citation from Margaret Thatcher reads: “The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people’s money.” The socialists, however, were not the only ones who would run out of other people’s money. Democracies are quite capable of duplicating this feat.

 The question is this: What entitles us to acquire other [...]

Christmas Cheer

By |2014-12-10T10:45:07-06:00December 15th, 2012|Categories: Christmas, Gifts for Imaginative Conservatives, John Barnes|

A number of my fellow travelers have recommended books for Christmas gifts. Here are some ideas for gifts that will enhance the reading experience. Cigars. In the movie Crimson Tide, Gene Hackman’s character, the captain of a nuclear submarine, tells his executive officer (Denzel Washington) not to grow too fond of cigars because “they’re more expensive than drugs.” [...]

John Zmirak: The Bad Catholic’s Guide

By |2014-01-05T19:20:52-06:00December 15th, 2012|Categories: Books, Catholicism, Jean-Jacques Rousseau|Tags: |

The Bad Catholic’s Guide to the Catechism: A Faithful, Fun-Loving Look at Catholic Dogmas, Doctrines, and Schmoctrines by John Zmirak Q: Why call this thing “Bad Catholic”? A: Because if you take your faith seriously, you’re bound to be dissatisfied with how well you’re living it. The kind of people who insist they’re “good Catholics” invariably [...]

The Transcendent in Tolkien

By |2019-01-03T18:11:24-06:00December 14th, 2012|Categories: Bradley J. Birzer, Christianity, J.R.R. Tolkien, Russell Kirk|Tags: , |

J. R. R. Tolkien ’s Sanctifying Myth: Understanding Middle-Earth by Bradley J. Birzer Much has been written of J.R.R. Tolkien’s accomplishment during the past half century, with critics struggling to understand the powerful grip exercised by the English fantasist’s writings upon readers. Some Tolkien-focused criticism has been enlightening, much has been repetitive, and a small [...]

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