Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Federalist 35

Further exploring the issue of the federal government’s “indefinite power of taxation,” Hamilton in Federalist 35 waded into some new waters.

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Featured Joseph Pearce Featured Joseph Pearce

Upon Which Rock?

T. S. Eliot’s poem The Waste Land, published in 1922, four years after the end of World War One, is probably the most influential and controversial poem of the past century.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Federalist 34

It is not my habit to go into contemporary politics, especially in these essays, but the power of taxation being — along with death — two of the certainties of life, and the twig having long been bent, it seems worth thinking about the relationship of Federalist 34 to the perennial problem of debt, one of the main themes of the essay.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Federalist 32

I want to remind the reader that The Federalist consists of essays written for average citizens, mostly farmers, many of whom had to have the essays read to them, published in local newspapers.

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Featured Henry T. Edmondson III Featured Henry T. Edmondson III

Grant’s Memoirs: A Review

Given that 2025 marks the 160th anniversary of the end of the American Civil War, it seems appropriate to consider one of America’s statesmen, Ulysses S. Grant and his highly regarded Personal Memoirs, written neck break speed, as he was rapidly dying from tongue and throat cancer.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Federalist 31

The French philosopher René Descartes believed that knowledge resulted from “clear and distinct ideas” that occurred in the mind.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Federalist 30

The two most consequential powers of modern governments are the power to conscript individuals into military service and to dip its hands into people’s pockets.

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