Politics
Feb 3, 2026

The Clash of Civilizations at 30

Three decades on, Huntington did not foresee the extent to which the West would erode, but he did perceive the warning signs.

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Pursuit of Happiness
Feb 3, 2026

One Nation Spaced Out

Kevin Sabet’s new book addresses a problem that has bedeviled us for thousands of years: What should individuals and society do about the use of psychoactive substances?

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Constitutionalism
Feb 2, 2026

Trump's Jeffersonian Foreign Policy

The Constitution creates a presidency that can respond forcefully to prevent serious threats to our national security.

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How FDR’s Bold Experimentation Blinkered the American Economy

Politics
Jan 30, 2026
How FDR’s Bold Experimentation Blinkered the American Economy

Twenty Years of Justice Alito

Constitutionalism
Jan 30, 2026
Twenty Years of Justice Alito

ICE and the Fourth Amendment

Constitutionalism
Jan 29, 2026
ICE and the Fourth Amendment
Economic Dynamism
January 28, 2026

Green Energy Dreams, Fossil Fuel Realities

Mark Mills joins the show to discuss the misguided and often fraudulent claim that green energy can replace fossil fuels.

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One Nation Spaced Out

Kevin Sabet’s new book addresses a problem that has bedeviled us for thousands of years: What should individuals and society do about the use of psychoactive substances?

Paul J. Larkin
Feb 3, 2026
Trump's Jeffersonian Foreign Policy

The Constitution creates a presidency that can respond forcefully to prevent serious threats to our national security.

Feb 2, 2026
How FDR’s Bold Experimentation Blinkered the American Economy

Overall, False Dawn is a disciplined, evidence-heavy challenge to the New Deal’s most self-flattering myth: that bold experimentation rescued the American economy.

Michael Munger
Jan 30, 2026
Twenty Years of Justice Alito

The nation is lucky to have Justice Alito. 

Aaron L. Nielson
Jan 30, 2026
ICE and the Fourth Amendment

The agency needs judicial oversight, not so-called administrative warrants.

Richard Epstein
Jan 29, 2026
California’s Proposed Billionaire Tax and Its Portents for Normal People

The deeper significance of California's billionaire tax is in how it redefines what it means to own property in the United States.

Julia R. Cartwright, Paul Mueller
Jan 29, 2026
Might the "New Right 5.0" Be the Old Fusionism?

Since the self-conscious conservative movement came together in the 1950s, a "new right" has emerged every few years.

Steven F. Hayward
Jan 28, 2026
The Civitas Outlook Energy Symposium

Energy policy in America has become, over the past few decades, one of the most fraught debates in American politics.

Richard M. Reinsch II
Jan 21, 2026
From Energy Repression to Energy Dominance

Even the most powerful computers on earth have no idea how much energy America will need for the next generation. What, then, is the path forward?

Russ Greene
Jan 21, 2026
America’s Energy Revolution Continues

Twenty years ago, energy discourse was awash in buzzwords and concepts such as "smart grid" and "hydrogen highway." These ideas now seem as quaint and obsolete as rotary dial telephones.

Steven F. Hayward
Jan 21, 2026
Oil Remains the Epicenter of Commerce, Geopolitics, and Energy

The question for framing next generation energy policies distills to knowing whether there are any truly new means for meeting society’s energy needs.

Mark Mills
Jan 21, 2026
Trump's Troubling Economic Turn

How far will current economic regulations go in the Trump White House?

Jan 16, 2026
The Poverty of Vanceonomics

At the core of Vanceonomics is a preferential option for government intervention.

Jan 14, 2026
Entrepreneurial Freedom in the Age of AI

The AI economy can lead to a more inclusive economy that permits people the freedom to choose when they work, what they work on, and who they work for.

Jan 12, 2026
How FDR’s Bold Experimentation Blinkered the American Economy

Overall, False Dawn is a disciplined, evidence-heavy challenge to the New Deal’s most self-flattering myth: that bold experimentation rescued the American economy.

Michael Munger
Jan 30, 2026
Might the "New Right 5.0" Be the Old Fusionism?

Since the self-conscious conservative movement came together in the 1950s, a "new right" has emerged every few years.

Steven F. Hayward
Jan 28, 2026
The Politics and Policies of Growth

The door is once again open to growth-first thinking.

Veronique de Rugy
Jan 28, 2026
Anti-Semitism and Anti-Christian Zionism On The Right

As the very bounds of conservatism continue to ebb and flow, stark lines are being drawn of how those on the right view Israel and the Jewish people.

Josh Blackman
Jan 27, 2026
Will Minneapolis Trigger the Insurrection Act?

President Donald Trump appears poised to invoke the Insurrection Act to quell the rising violence in Minnesota.

Jan 26, 2026
Trump's Greenland Aggression

Richard Epstein on the Greenland capers.

Richard Epstein
Jan 22, 2026
The War on Affordable and Abundant Energy Continues

With climate litigation faltering, the decarbonization effort is shifting to state legislatures.

Michael Toth
Jan 21, 2026
Twenty Years of Justice Alito

The nation is lucky to have Justice Alito. 

Aaron L. Nielson
Jan 30, 2026
ICE and the Fourth Amendment

The agency needs judicial oversight, not so-called administrative warrants.

Richard Epstein
Jan 29, 2026
Looking For Solidarity in the Wrong Place

Only by drawing a caricature of American legal history can R. R. Reno assert that we need a figure like Woodrow Wilson to correct liberalism’s excesses.

Joseph Postell
Jan 27, 2026
Why is the Federal Reserve Special — and Just How Special is It?

How does the Fed fit into the Court's reform of the administrative state?

Aaron L. Nielson
Jan 20, 2026
Kneecapping Powell, Undermining the Rule of Law

Donald Trump and conservatives know the perils of lawfare all too well. Why subject Jerome Powell to the same thing?

John G. Malcolm, Richard Stern
Jan 15, 2026
Limiting the Federal Government

Failure to consider the sponsors’ representations of the Constitution’s meaning seriously impairs the quality of interpretation.

Jan 14, 2026
The Chief Justice's Big Idea

Chief Justice John Roberts has a potentially major idea for federal agency power.

Aaron L. Nielson
Jan 6, 2026
The AI Frontier Must be Fiercely Competitive

In the long run, overregulation could run the risk of making AI less safe.

Kevin Frazier
Jan 23, 2026
What Is History's Role in Civic Education?

Regrettable trends within the professional discipline of history have forfeited its vaunted former status in civic education.

Benjamin P. Haines
Jan 23, 2026
McNamara in the Rear-View Mirror

There is much more to the McNamara story than simply a Ford CEO becoming a government executive, as Philip and William Taubman lay out in McNamara at War: A New History.

Tevi Troy
Jan 22, 2026
The Quintessential American: Ben Franklin, Man of All Ages

Franklin’s prudence is as welcome 320 years on as his legendary serenity.

Juliana Geran Pilon
Jan 16, 2026
The Moral Case for America in a Nutshell

America’s proponents now have no choice but to articulate their own simple and effective moral case for our way of life.

David C. Rose
Jan 15, 2026
The Wealth of Nations at 250: Adam Smith’s Blueprint for the American Economy

Ideas of few books have shaped the economic logic of the American experiment more profoundly than The Wealth of Nations, even when Americans have not always realized it as an agent that promotes prosperity and reduces poverty.

Jonathan Hartley
Jan 6, 2026
Thank You, Ben

You gave me a great gift, Ben: the reminder that, because life is finite, whatever good we can do for others must be our daily task, to help others in need.

Dec 31, 2025
Civitas Outlook
One Nation Spaced Out

Kevin Sabet’s new book addresses a problem that has bedeviled us for thousands of years: What should individuals and society do about the use of psychoactive substances?

Civitas Outlook
The Clash of Civilizations at 30

Three decades on, Huntington did not foresee the extent to which the West would erode, but he did perceive the warning signs.

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