A Radical Left Without the Radicalism
The Trial of the Chicago 7 presents the 1960s radicals as earnest, likeable people who just want peace, man!
The Trial of the Chicago 7 presents the 1960s radicals as earnest, likeable people who just want peace, man!
Hitchcock told dark stories of contemporary America because he saw dark things coming.
Stanley Kurtz discusses how the same arguments made in the 90s for ending Western Civilization courses are now dominating our public discourse on race.
The mantra of "follow the science" ignores the reality that no one set of facts can dictate any political result.
Revolutions involve conspiracies of a sort—suppressed intentions and a peaceable surface combined with a determined adherence to the revolutionary cause.
The anger we feel in the present moment is a hot emotion directed at our fellow citizens: it is indicative of in-house strife.
Like a frog in the proverbial pot of boiling water, we are now immersed in the suddenly-ubiquitous delusion of wokeness.
Three recent cases challenge the statutory and constitutional bases of legislative delegation to executive branches.
Tariq Ramadan has been revealed to be a hypocrite of the most repellent kind. Is he a a serious criminal too?
Radical uncertainty—whether stemming from war, disease, or love of coffee—will always prevail.