
Anger Management
Jonathan Turley’s 'Rage and the Republic' stands out as a worthwhile addition to the growing list of books on the Revolution.

Why Justice Alito Should Not Recuse from 'Suncor v. Boulder'
Fidelity to the law as written has been the hallmark of Justice Alito’s twenty years on the Court.

“Texas” and Confessions of Error in the U.S. Supreme Court
Prosecutors have a duty to see justice done.
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Contract with Conservatism: The Tea Party Past and Post-Trump Future
There is no third party waiting in the wings.

Can Socialist Fantasies Overtake the World?
Yes, if the unworldly philosophers at the Global Justice Project are allowed to have their way.

Can Socialist Fantasies Overtake the World?
Yes, if the unworldly philosophers at the Global Justice Project are allowed to have their way.

An AI Commencement Address That Might Not Elicit Boos
Someone has to dare to point the path forward in those communities. We need many more Nehemiahs.

The Green New Dependency: How China Captured Western Climate Agendas
With the help of universities, Net Zero’s rules were quietly written to save China’s export model—with the West as the customer.

The Shrinking Middle Class and Booming Upper-Middle Class: The Plot Thickens
What accounts for this disconnect between perception and reality?

New York City Is Mamdani’s Economic Fantasy Land
It will take a sustained effort for New York’s progressive, now socialist left, to rethink the errors of their ways before they learn the hard way.

The Brexit Vote Ten Years On
Some laud the Brexit vote as the triumphant moment when a nation liberated itself, and some mourn it as an act of supreme democratic folly.

Properly Honoring Slavery’s End
Designating Juneteenth as the federal holiday for emancipation is not only politically motivated but is historically imprecise.

America’s Clausewitz: William Tecumseh Sherman’s Meditations on the Nature of War
Sherman was America’s foremost, if unwitting, interpreter of the Prussian military theorist Carl von Clausewitz.

The Hart Conservatives
Whether he would have preferred it at his death or not, much of the media, institutional, and executive-centered conservative movement of today bears Jeffrey Hart's imprint.

“Democratic” Socialism Is Undemocratic
By promoting class hatred, suppressing private initiative, and seeking enhanced control of our lives, today’s democratic socialists undermine patriotism and individual initiative—two qualities that have long distinguished the United States from other major nations.

“Texas” and Confessions of Error in the U.S. Supreme Court
Prosecutors have a duty to see justice done.
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Our American Legal Tradition Is Not the Warren Court’s Tradition
Most Americans today have no living memory of the world before the Warren and Burger Courts.

How to Shorten SCOTUS Oral Argument
Why not give the Justices an allotment of “extra” time to spend as they will across the term?

The Fifth Circuit’s Chance to Expose the Inflation Reduction Act’s Unconstitutionality
Despite the mounting evidence of harm, the Medicare Drug Price Negotiation Program remains law — and the Justice Department continues to defend it in federal court.
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Ivy League Miseducation
Stefanik is not wrong at all in pointing out what ails higher education. However, her scope is extremely limiting, and her approach rather superficial.
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The Declaration Is a Metaphysical and Political Triumph
It is the nature of genuinely lasting great texts that we observe new things in them that fit our moment.

The Backstory of 1776
The Declaration of Independence was not written to attain liberty. It was written because the founders concluded that England was eroding the liberty they already had.

Gordon Wood's American Revolution
Widely acknowledged as the pre-eminent historian of the American Founding in our time, Wood was virtually without peer within academic American history today.

Gordon Wood Told the Truth About America
Gordon Wood showed us that a great historian could also be a regular guy.


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