By assigning personal attributes to birth cohort, generationism tends to undermine personal responsibility.
Shape of Water
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Competition for real academic excellence could generate a virtuous cycle of reform.
In the new colonialism, global institutions are quietly undermining African values.
Is the New Right opening a bright new chapter for American families, or leading us down a dark alleyway?
Protectionism appeals to voters’ emotions, but the twentieth century’s greatest statesman knew that free enterprise could, too.
The Digital Revolution may distort public discourse, but it is up to individuals—not the government—to think for themselves.
Allied victory in World War II reshaped the world—and America’s place in it.
The Medieval origin of universities sheds some light on how they ought to function in mass society.
The supermajoritarian rules of the upcoming papal conclave can teach us something about how representative bodies pursue consensus.
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Francis made progressive politics his lodestar. The result was a failed papacy.
A Law & Liberty symposium on Quentin Skinner's Liberty as Independence.
The late Mario Vargas Llosa shows how literature can help us resist the base impulses of populism, nationalism, and authoritarian politics.
Space travel raises some hard moral questions, but Bong Joon Ho's newest film doesn't explore them.
The War that Changed America reflects on Americans' own indecision about what the Vietnam War meant.
A recent cancellation poses a challenge to Princeton’s newfound commitment to free speech.