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Conversation Starters with … Ian Rowe
In your video True Diversity: Ian Rowe’s Story, you describe the resegregation of your junior high school, in which an annex was created for white students. Your parents initially wanted you
Robert Nisbet: Tradition & Community
“To the contemporary social scientist,” observed Robert Nisbet (1913–1996), “to be labeled a conservative is more often to be damned than praised.” Already evident when he published it in
Abortion: Violence Against Women
Abortion solves problems. This is what its advocates promised in the years leading up to the Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade, which invented a supposed constitutional right to abortion
Patrick Deneen’s Otherworldly Regime
It is a common habit of progressives to denounce various aspects of American history as racist, sexist, or in some other way bigoted. The U.S. Constitution, we are often reminded, had a
The Monarch and the Marxist
Queen Elizabeth II and Mikhail Gorbachev were born five years apart. They lived through a century of enormous change. Seven decades before either was born, Charles Dickens (1859) penned A
Boutique Marxism and the Critical Revolution
The title of this review may well seem unduly snide; regrettably, it is the most precise description of the account of critical history on offer in this book. From his earliest publications
Bioethics and the Human Person: God in the Machine
Rebecca Brown begins a 2019 essay “Philosophy Can Make the Previously Unthinkable Thinkable” by explaining the Overton window of political possibilities. Joseph Overton proposed the idea
When Ideology Trumps Sound Scholarship
Some reviews are difficult to write. Responding to David Hollinger’s Christianity’s American Fate, I initially used a tone that was wholly mocking and sarcastic, because the book is, from so
America in Debt: A Short History
On the website of the U.S. Department of the Treasury, there is a section entitled “Debt to the Penny.” It reports the total debt of the U.S. government on a daily basis. Every so often it


