Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Federalist 43

In Federalist #43 Madison continued the themes of the prior essays: an examination of the detailed powers given Congress in Article I, section 8, while also addressing some additional powers.

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Featured Jason Peters Featured Jason Peters

Weak Curiosity

If you are dimly aware of a thing called “national politics,” and if you are also dimly aware that a lot of people are getting very red in the face over them, then you might, stifling a yawn, walk over to your bookshelf and pull down a collection of Emerson’s essays.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Federalist 42

Two viruses that define our age and negatively affect our judgements are the tendency to read the past in light of present values and, conversely, to think the problems we face are unique to us.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Federalist 38

In the past two Reflection essays I’ve pondered the question as to whether American had a founding and, if so, what difference it makes to think so.

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Featured Michael P. Federici Featured Michael P. Federici

What’s the Rush?

The American founders were acutely aware that human beings desire power. Like Lord Acton, they believed that power tends to have a corrupting effect on those not only who attain it but those who reach for it.

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Heritage Jeff Polet Heritage Jeff Polet

Federalist 37

A story, perhaps apocryphal, has an audience member ask Albert Einstein why so many advances had been made in physics and so few in our understanding of politics.

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