In A Religiously And Politically Polarized Country, Is There Still Hope For Shared Ground?
Alexis de Tocqueville believed Christianity provided a common moral language for the American people. But what happens when faith is on the decline?
Tocqueville’s Private Thoughts About The French Revolution Revealed
Newly translated and carefully edited, ‘Recollections’ contains Tocqueville’s thoughts ‘in the raw’ as a participant in the upheavals that shook France between 1848 and 1853.
Ramming The Country Towards Impeachment Will Be Disastrous
Getting President Trump impeached may give Democrats short-term victory. But by infuriating rural voters, it’s sure to widen the schism between our ‘two Americas.’
The Art Of Living And Writing Freely Can Save Us From Ourselves
In his new book ‘The Art of Being Free,’ James Poulos puts twenty-first-century popular culture and the Western canon in a blender and comes up with a wholly original book that reshapes what we think about freedom.
What We Can Learn From Tocqueville’s Insights Into Crime
Alexis de Tocqueville originally visited America to study its prison system. Certain patterns he observed influence the current, critical state of our criminal justice system.
For The West, Christian Hunting Is The Sport Of Lawmakers And Judges
Washington DC’s City Council is moving to force religious schools to pay for employee abortions and on-campus gay advocacy organizations.
What Comes After The Pink Police State
Escaping the pink police state requires us to set aside fears that we cannot change and once again speak with each other, face to face.
We’re Losing The Two Things Tocqueville Said Mattered Most About American Democracy
Alexis de Tocqueville wrote that equality and religiosity are the two foundations of the American experiment. Why are we abandoning them?