Religion can make motherhood appealing in the West while preserving the fruits of feminism.
Benedetto Croce
Recent
A symposium on the 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Jacques Maritain, Charles Malik, and other Christian thinkers were instrumental in creating the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
The concept of rights is not a modern innovation springing from an ideology of radical individualism and opposed to the common good.
Human rights are headed for extinction if they are not recognized as natural law.
With respect to new rights, a prior question still applies: whether they should be recognized as rights.
Anti-Zionism has long helped to cement an unholy alliance of Marxists, Islamists, and progressives.
Military conscription is contrary to the self-direction that is necessary for a culture that holds liberty as paramount.
Trade openness is a positive-sum enterprise through which all participants win—albeit to varying degrees and in different ways.
A newsletter worth reading.
Slockish v. US Department of Transportation shows that religious freedom cases need not always take an all-or-nothing approach.
The landscape for educational freedom is finally freed of nineteenth-century prejudices, but other federal constitutional questions remain.
One hundred years ago, J. Gresham Machen’s Christianity and Liberalism promoted school choice as the way to keep parents in charge of education.
The response on American campuses to Hamas' brutality might prompt donors to seek reform. But what is the way forward?
Israel confronts hard truths that are half-forgotten in the sheltered West.
What is the citizen to think of European governments that cannot expel the most radical threats to public life?