The Virginia and Kentucky Resolutions
Our tendency to treat our contemporary problems as if they are unique can blind us to the fact that our country has always been divided.
Tribalism and the Sacred Part II
In last week’s essay, we looked at how ideas of “the sacred,” violence, and suffering congeal into our modern notions of victimhood, and our tendency to grant moral status to “victims.”
The Historical Case Against Absolute Presidential Immunity
The US Supreme Court will hear arguments on April 25, 2024 in the case of Trump v. US, a case which will determine whether the former president is immune from prosecution on charges related to trying to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.
Thoughts on the Unwritten Constitution
The last two Heritage essays made brief references to one of America’s most interesting and mercurial thinkers, Orestes Brownson.
Tribalism and the Sacred Part 1
We have argued in this space that the state of democracy in America is both worse and better than people think.
A More Perfect Union
One of the more satisfying parts of this job has been engaging in partnerships with other organizations and presidential centers and foundations dedicated to serving the public weal and strengthening democratic norms and practices.
Aleksei Navalny and the Politics of Courage
We in the United States in 2024 are in the midst of what political scientists and others call “polarization,” by which the poles of right and left grow stronger while the “center does not hold,” as the Irish poet once wrote.
Virtue and the American Founding Part II
Last week we discussed Rousseau’s idea that “the act that constitutes the republic isn’t part of its constitution,” done by a “lawgiver” “able to see all men’s passions without having any of them.”
The Gnostic Problem Part 2
Last week I gave a brief introduction to the thinking of Eric Voegelin, but more importantly to the problem of Gnosticism.
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.
Virtue and the American Founding Part 1
The Michigan legislature, in 1994, declared Russell the state’s “greatest man of letters.”
The Idea of a Commercial Republic
This series aims to help our readers understand the complexity of our Constitutional system, in no small part by detailing the arguments involved in its construction.
In Defense of Scouting: Gerald Ford
Recent times have been tough for Boy Scouts of America. Although still one of the largest youth organizations in the US, its ranks have dwindled from about 3 million in the 1970s to fewer than 800,000 today
Our Gnostic Moment
One question I like asking people is, if they went to college, which books had a special impact on either their thinking or their general approach to life.
Federalist 37 and the Problem of Knowing
Readers of these pages know our special interest in the political thinking that took place around the founding era and now it can help illuminate our politics today.
Innovation and Infinite Desire
It is a fantasy of the industrial episode—that brief blip in human history that began with the Industrial Revolution but is now showing signs of congestive heart failure, complete with the attendant edema below the knees—that infinite desires can be satisfied indefinitely in a finite space.
The Urge to Localism
In my former life as a professor, and in my current non-professional life, I’ve advocated for a school of thought called “localism.”
Living a Life of Civility
The coarsening of public discourse has brought attention about the need to back civility back into the culture.
The Melodrama
Much of our lives become embroiled in and defined by our obsessions with things “fleeting and failing,” but we can never silence the still, small voice within us that tells us to seek for truth and meaning beyond the ephemera.
Energy in the Executive
The framers of our Constitution worried most about the power of the legislature, and for that reason directed much of their attention to checks upon legislative power.