Archives: The city and the revolutionary tradition
Edward C. Banfield | American Enterprise Institute History will judge him kindly
Sadanand Dhume | Times of India As India mourns Atal Bihari Vajpayee, the national outpouring of grief may dwarf even the august office he once held. Over the past 50 years, no prime minister who died of natural causes has evoked as spontaneous and widespread a display of sorrow. PolicyEd Introduces Policy Briefs via PolicyEd The Hoover Institution’s PolicyEd initiative today introduced a new educational video series entitled Policy Briefs, which explores issues related to civics, environment, economics, health care, and national security. Offering key principles and real-world examples, each episode features a succinct, easy to understand, and sharable policy explanation from a talk or presentation by a Hoover Institution fellow. How To Fix The Intelligence Community
quoting Victor Davis Hanson via PJ Media Victor Davis Hanson, as he so often does, gives us an excellent and concise bird’s-eye view of where we stand with the intelligence community. DAVID BLACK
The Revolution Against the Revolution Looking back on Shays’ Rebellion INTERVIEW: SIR ROGER SCRUTON ON WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A CONSERVATIVE
National Review Online EPPC Senior Fellow Roger Scruton discusses his latest book, Conservatism: An Invitation to the Great Tradition, and the key differences between the left and the right. CONTINUE READING The Marshall Plan That Failed // Daniel Kurtz-Phelan Before George Marshall transformed American foreign policy in Europe, he lost a major political fight in China. Lyle J.Goldstein writes: It feels surreal to rehash the “Who lost China?” debate from nearly seventy years ago, but here we are yet again deliberating the future of Taiwan and its role in U.S.-China relations and in U.S. defense strategy more broadly. [..]Some Americans have evidently not changed their views much since the 1950s and remain blissfully ignorant of both the relevant history and, even more disturbingly, of the rapidly shifting military balance in the Asia-Pacific region. - The National Interest
How The Peloponnesian War Brought Athens' Golden Age To An End
quoting Victor Davis Hanson via The Federalist In the seventh lecture of Hillsdale College’s course on the histories of Athens and Sparta, which you can follow along with me here, Victor Davis Hanson, a history fellow at Hillsdale College, explains how the Peloponnesian War brought Athens’ golden age to an end. |
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CategoriesArchives
February 2024
EXAMPLE OF SUCCESS IN U.S. FOREIGN POLICY ACE VENTURA
PAUL RAHE: REALISM IN FOREIGN AFFAIRS, SPARTA
CONSCIENCE & TEMPORAL AUTHORITY
SHAKESPEARE
POSITIVE LAW vs. CONSCIENCE
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