We should be skeptical about more price gouging laws, especially new ones at the federal level.
Glenn A. Moots
Elias Boudinot may be the greatest Founder that most Americans do not know.
When it comes to religious establishment, American Protestants have all become Baptists.
Can the roots of our current dissatisfaction with the workplace be traced back to the former GE Chairman?
The real history of America's political pulpit defies simple categorization, but is essential to understanding our nation's past.
The magisterial reformers were conservative.
David Henreckson has provided a fine chronicle demonstrating the significance of reformed Protestantism for modern political thought.
Biden promises to fight crime, but his gun control proposals are examples of how public policy has become performative and imprudent.
Whatever the “City on a Hill” is, the phrase was not discovered by Kennedy or Reagan.
We might look to Groundhog Day as an unlikely source of wisdom for thinking about life in lockdown.
Althusius offers a rich constitutionalism that empowers persons to thrive alongside one another in deliberate communities.
The author demonstrates the consequences of progressive social thought for mainline Protestantism: ecumenical denominations faded, evangelicals flourished.
Glenn A. Moots is Professor of Political Science and Philosophy at Northwood University and also serves as a Research Fellow at the McNair Center for the Advancement of Free Enterprise and Entrepreneurship there. He is the author of Politics Reformed: The Anglo-American Legacy of Covenant Theology (University of Missouri Press, 2010, 2022 paperback) and coedited, with Phillip Hamilton, Justifying Revolution: Law, Virtue, and Violence in the American Revolution (University of Oklahoma Press, 2018).