The 1884 and 2024 presidential elections are essential reminders that political battle lines are not set in stone and that demographics is not destiny.
Political Theory of the American Founding
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The new legal vulnerabilities facing disparity studies create a real opportunity to overturn discriminatory policies.
As a congressman, Davy Crockett found ways to navigate populist upheaval and maintain his own independence.
The St. Isidore case differs significantly from previous religious freedom cases involving schools.
For the Frenchman, mores were critical to explaining why ostensibly similar countries took economic paths that often varied widely.
Both sides accuse the other of being a threat to democracy. But what does that really mean?
A twenty-five-year-old book could help us better understand today's gender turmoil.
Unthinking deference to Supreme Court opinions on the part of state courts is distorting America’s constitutional system.
Gratitude and humility are more important to a conservative outlook than plans and "first principles."
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We consider our votes important precisely at the time they have become devalued.
Neither critics nor defenders of our presidential election system seem to fully understand why the Constitution’s framers constructed it as they did.
Liberalism isn’t buried in an irretrievable past. Rather, it’s embedded in the present.
Non-discrimination commissioners often serve as investigators, prosecutors, judges, and juries.
Javier Milei's policy choices make sense in light of the economic theory of Jacques Rueff.
Megalopolis depicts two worldviews which lead to a post-liberal order—and oppression for ordinary people.