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USA vs. NSA

I had planned to opine–but I can’t say it better than this:

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Symposium: The Problem with “Western Civ”

There is no such thing as “Eastern Civ.” Jesse Jackson and his disciples at Stanford proved that much in 1988. They succeeded in accelerating a growing disaffection for this thing called Western...

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Symposium: A “Sustainable” Conservatism

There is a lot of good stuff in Mark Mitchell’s “Roots, Limits, and Love,” but, in the spirit of his remarks, I’ll limit myself—to a single word, though perhaps his most provocative: “sustainable.”...

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Symposium: Causal Confusion

This article is in response to “The Duties of a Free Citizen,” by Kevin Gutzman and is part of the symposium on “What’s Wrong with Conservatism?” Dr. Gutzman has a knack for naming the problem; his...

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Symposium: Despair Is Too Much of a Good Thing

This article is in response to “Rescuing Freedom from Despair” by Jonathan S. Tobin and is part of the symposium on “What’s Wrong With Conservatism?” If, as Jonathan Tobin writes, despair comes...

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Symposium: Art, Not Entertainment

This article is in response to Want Truth? Work for Beauty by Gerald Russello and is part of the symposium, “Conservatism: What’s Wrong with It and How Can We Make It Right?” I’ll start with a sniffy...

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Symposium: Rubber, Meet Road.

This article is in response to “Go Radical or Go Home” by George Neumayr and is part of the symposium, “Conservatism: What’s Wrong with It and How Can We Make It Right?” There is a lot of...

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Symposium: Taking Exception to Exceptionalism

This article is in response to “Reject Jingoism and Groupthink” by Daniel Larison and is part of the symposium, “Conservatism: What’s Wrong With It and How Can We Make It Right?” I have questions about...

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Symposium: Putting the Person Back in Populism

This article is in response to “It’s Time for Free Market Populism” by Timothy Carney and is part of the symposium, “Conservatism: What’s Wrong With It and How Can We Make It Right?” Whatever his...

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The ‘Health’‘Care’ Hoax

There is much to be said about the Obamcare “rollout”—to quote Jonah Goldberg, “I put quotation marks around ‘rollout’ because the term implies actual rolling, and this thing has moved as gracefully as...

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… And to All a State-Approved Holiday Gathering!

I’m not sure the President’s team quite understands what is meant by “the Christmas spirit.” From Barry’s official Twitter handle: Of course, it could be worse. You could be the poor schmo in footie...

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LEGO’s Latest Foe

Count me out for The LEGO Movie, alas. I had hoped that rumors of the plotline were false, but a new tie-in product confirms every free-market lover’s worst fear: I’m not a master propagandist, but is...

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Blowing Smoke: Liberals and Cigarettes

With Iraq backsliding into the hands of al-Qaeda, Iran declaring its dominance over a weak-willed West, pitiful December job numbers on the domestic front, and the ongoing slow-motion train wreck that...

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The Last Acceptable Prejudice

Over at National Review Online’s Corner, Rev. Robert Barron—of Word on Fire fame, and the rector of Mundelein Seminary outside Chicago—has an interesting piece in response to “two outrageously...

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The State of the Union is . . . Alarming

Kevin Williamson, in a recent piece at National Review Online, does not mince words: The annual State of the Union pageant is a hideous, dispiriting, ugly, monotonous, un-American, un-republican,...

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Leisure: The Basis of College

This article appears in the Spring 2014 issue of the Intercollegiate Review. Check out the rest issue right here. “I just had an appointment with my best friend at seven this morning,” says one of the...

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Obamacare’s Slimiest Side

In the sharp words of the Wall Street Journal’s editorial board, “ ‘ObamaCare’ is useful shorthand for the Affordable Care Act not least because the law increasingly means whatever President Obama says...

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‘Experiments in Living’

I’m late to the party, but Patrick Deneen, of the University of Notre Dame, has a splendid little essay over at The American Conservative, on the effects of John Stuart Mill’s “emancipatory”...

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Doomed to Repeat

If it were not for the seriousness of the consequences, it would seem hardly sporting anymore to continue attacking the present administration’s foreign policy (whatever in the way of “policy” one can...

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A Poetic Lent

In the spirit of the season, First Things has analyses of two poets whose work gave particular attention to the Easter season. Both were poets of great faith–and of great hope. Catherine Addington...

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