Featured Richard Gunderman Featured Richard Gunderman

Learning from Pandemics

The recent COVID-19 pandemic has not generated the kind of self-critical examination that we need to undertake if we are to avoid repeating mistakes in the future.

Read More
Featured Louis Markos Featured Louis Markos

In Defense of Private Property and Tradition

Rousseau’s seemingly optimistic theory that man is good in nature (the “noble savage”) but is corrupted by private property and by traditional social, political, and ecclesiastical institutions proved disastrous, leading to the irrational and deadly utopianism of the French Revolution.

Read More
Featured Sarah Reardon Featured Sarah Reardon

In Search of Ordinary Patriotism

We are winding toward a season in America in which our thoughts about our country must come to bear upon our decisions, and we must, whatever our convictions about modern democracy, consider how we should best use our constitutional rights.

Read More
Featured Richard Gunderman Featured Richard Gunderman

Ford and Child Support

On January 4, 1975, US President Gerald Ford signed into law a section of the Social Security Act that established a national child support collection system.

Read More
Featured Henry T. Edmondson III Featured Henry T. Edmondson III

The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien

Tolkien’s collected correspondence was first published in 1981; a new edition was released in late 2023, The Letters of J.R.R. Tolkien: Revised and Expanded Edition, which adds more letters to the previous correspondence collection.

Read More