A Culture of Immediacy
Democracy has an unfortunate tendency to undermine itself by fixing citizens’ gaze on the present moment.
Democracy has an unfortunate tendency to undermine itself by fixing citizens’ gaze on the present moment.
Civic thought and leadership institutes will thrive if they promote strong scholarship and courses in traditional fields the mainstream academy sleights.
America long ago rejected the trappings of monarchy in favor of republicanism, but many have wanted to have it both ways.
In the twilight of our post-war enlightenment, it is worth revisiting the insights of the Shelburne Circle.
The legendary rivalry between John Diefenbaker and Lester Pearson defined modern Canada—and may hold lessons for conservatives and liberals alike.
The originalist revolution will never be complete until we fully appreciate the natural law roots of the common law.
Historians may never speak of an “Age of Adams” to rival Andrew Jackson, but Randall Woods’s new biography reveals the sixth president’s greatness.
Judaism perpetually frustrates their assumptions about comprehensive progress in politics.
A company with 90 percent market share is a monopoly according to the Department of Justice, but those numbers can be easily manipulated.
Media outlets are infantilising the population, suggesting that everyone is constantly on a knife edge of emotional implosion.