Among many unfair attacks on Mormons in the nineteenth century, slavery apologist George Fitzhugh’s was distinctive.
The Constitution established a presidency with a unique institutional identity that serves as its own source of strength.
The rights revolution has led to a deep distrust of human authority in even its most benign form.
Babbitt's Democracy and Leadership reflects a kind of humanism that may seem alien to our time, but remains vitally relevant.
Jeffrey Rosen fails to address the differences between the Founders’ understanding of virtues and the ancients’.
One hundred years later, conservative Protestants have spent a good chunk of last year commemorating Machen’s Christianity and Liberalism.
Human rights are headed for extinction if they are not recognized as natural law.
In the premodern world, equality was compatible with liberty. It’s time to return to that conception.
The core value of community animates the best thinkers on both the left and the right.
The moralism of civil rights politics makes conservatives uncomfortable, but they must work to make it better, more fair, and more humane.
African Founders corrects some of the ideological uses of black American history.
An imported "oppressor-oppressed" ideology ran smack-dab into the intensely democratic and egalitarian Australian political order.
While purporting to expand one set of individual rights, Sullivan did immense harm to another.
At New College, students are again learning to value and perpetuate the Western tradition.