Tim Hetherington’s photos of soldiers at the front show that life pursues its various courses even in the most dire circumstances.
Adam Nicolson
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When it comes to the Constitution, the Framers, not the ratifiers, undertook the essential law-making acts.
To properly understand and interpret the Constitution, originalist analysis should embrace legal meaning—not just lay meaning.
To fight today’s wars, the DOD should embrace market principles when purchasing and building weapons systems.
Why aren’t there any films that capture the fighting spirit and heroism of everyday Americans on September 11, 2001?
Democracy has an unfortunate tendency to undermine itself by fixing citizens’ gaze on the present moment.
America long ago rejected the trappings of monarchy in favor of republicanism, but many have wanted to have it both ways.
The originalist revolution will never be complete until we fully appreciate the natural law roots of the common law.
Judaism perpetually frustrates their assumptions about comprehensive progress in politics.
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A company with 90 percent market share is a monopoly according to the Department of Justice, but those numbers can be easily manipulated.
Media outlets are infantilising the population, suggesting that everyone is constantly on a knife edge of emotional implosion.
The silent majority must become more organized, using elected government to reform compromised institutions.
Hume’s warnings against public debt should spur American leaders to address our own runaway debt crisis.
Raygun emerged from a tradition that does not enshrine excellence. That tradition is the academy.
Under any version of originalism, the Hylton case is useless, or worse than useless, as evidence of constitutional meaning.