There is good reason to think that impeachment remains on the table, even after politicians leave office.
Desmond Doss
Recent
If we truly want to promote America’s common good, even more government intervention than we already have is probably not the way to do it.
It is magical thinking to believe that the United States can run large deficits indefinitely.
The bureaucrats that enforce "diversity and inclusion" are often all too happy to maximize ideological objectives at the expense of academic freedom.
A shared, underlying agreement about the dignity of the person is the gravitational center around which our polity and politics orbit.
The marketplace likely will move much faster than the court system, particularly in as dynamic an industry as technology.
The representational theory of capital offers a more nuanced understanding of what capital is, and what role it plays in economic life.
In an age of demagoguery, judges and justices—members of a highly credentialed elite dealing with complex questions—are perfect targets.
Even the errors of anti-liberal Catholics now have rights.
A newsletter worth reading.
Trying to eliminate antipathy, ridicule, and insult from the human heart and mind is a task to make that of Sisyphus seem like an afternoon stroll.
American politics has reached the point where merely establishing the basic facts that frame our political debate takes us to the brink of crisis.
Our media, our legislation, and our culture continue to popularize a stilted image of who the modern veteran is.
The editors present the five most-read Law & Liberty essays of 2020.
Underlying trends cloud the future of classical liberalism, even as it now has gained a redoubt in our judiciary and retained a perch in our politics.
The editors present the five most-read Law & Liberty book reviews of 2020.