Whatever one thinks of baby bonuses or child-tax credits as policy matters, the debate over “natalism” lays bare the deepest fault line in modern politics.
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Conservatism in Germany may have fallen on hard times, but a group of thinkers from its past can help us recover the best of its tradition.
This is not how you fix the problems at Harvard.
Some economists may need to embrace a wider view of the world, but the field’s opposition to tariffs is well-founded.
Print journalism is on the decline, but we should find ways to preserve the best of its tradition.
In an age marked by populism and a distrust of elites, the wisdom of one of Shakespeare’s neglected plays helps us remember the humane end of politics.
Rust reiterates a classic Western theme: there are always consequences to taking life.
Eric Voegelin warned against viewing our flawed world as a spiritual prison. That ideological tendency is still around.
If New York City wanted to honor African Americans, why not turn to great black statesmen, educators, writers, or soldiers?
A newsletter worth reading.
Markets provide the space in which civil society, social capital, and associational life thrives. Commerce and social life go hand-in-hand.
Farage’s political ascent is aided by both Tory and Labour ineptitude.
His business was doing philosophy, and sometimes helping others to do it.
A century ago, the Court recognized the essential right of parents to direct the education of their children.
Animosity towards DEI should not be permitted to derail fair and effective criminal justice policies.
The justices did not reach the merits in the St. Isidore case, and thus did not retreat from settled and sound religious liberty principles.