Sending truckloads of money with abandon is over.
America cannot turn its back on a spacefaring future.
| CARVIEW |
America cannot turn its back on a spacefaring future.
DEI is the latest manifestation of centralized power.
What the pro-life movement needs is clarity, not reactionism.
The administration has racked up countless victories.
It currently incentivizes lawsuits and unfunded liabilities.
Sending truckloads of money with abandon is over.
Andrew Jackson’s legacy—and Donald Trump’s.
Leftist radicals are doubling down.
They’re attempting to subvert the chain of command.
Teaching the world the value of liberty.
The continent is in even worse shape than what the National Security Strategy suggests.
Why Americans should care about the country’s identity crisis.
Creating progressive moral mascots is bad history.
Preserving liberty and engendering civic gratitude.
We must reject repudiation in all its forms.
We need to send them elsewhere.
A rootless generation looks for home in dark places.
No, but he may have been elected by them.
NVIDIA CEO Jensen Huang shouldn’t try to run U.S. foreign policy.
Left-wing activists are deciding what red state students are learning.
Forming Americans who are worthy to carry on the country’s legacy.
Stopping the spread of the radical ideology in Latin America.
At one year, this is an administration firing on all cylinders to fulfill President Trump’s promises to the American people.
Inez Feltscher Stepman in An Impressive Year One for Trump 2.0
During Donald Trump’s second term, the issue of IVF and life in the womb has come rocketing back to the foreground of national politics. In this series, authors discuss and debate potential paths forward for Americans struggling with fertility.
Challenges and opportunities in a fraught domain.
Based on his new Provocation for the Center for the American Way of Life, Ronald J. Pestritto and contributors assess what the Trump Administration is doing to counter the Progressives’ assault on republican government.
Recovering republican government in the 21st century.
Contributors respond to Jesse Merriam’s provocative call to rethink the aims of the conservative legal movement to meet the challenges of today.
It should prioritize fraying social bonds over civil rights shibboleths.
Based on his new Provocation for the Center for the American Way of Life, “Not Enough Good Men,” Scott Yenor and contributors reassess the modern rejection of single-sex education.
The declining state of American boys and girls makes it increasingly necessary.
Andrew Beck leads a focused discussion on assimilating to American culture, with responses from notable contributors.
We should expect anyone who wishes to be a citizen of the land of the free to adopt our way of life.
Contributors discuss Donald Trump’s impact on American politics following his famous ride down a golden Trump Tower escalator in June 2015.
Christopher Caldwell, Helen Andrews, David Goldman, and other writers respond to James Hankins’s immigration proposal.
Edward J. Erler and other contributors discuss the Claremont Institute’s case against automatic birthright citizenship.
President-elect Trump is right to see the doctrine as constitutionally dubious.
Dan McCarthy and other contributors lay out what Donald Trump should do in his second administration if he wins the 2024 election.
His agenda must revolve around recovering the practices of self-government.
Roger Kimball paints a picture of the future if Kamala Harris wins the presidency, and respondents consider the implications of that prospect.
Ryan Williams and other contributors consider the world-shaking implications of what happened at Donald Trump’s rally this past Saturday.
Ryan Williams and alumni of our fellowship programs reflect on the meaning of July 4th through food, festivities, and great speeches and documents from American history.
Authors respond to Spencer Klavan’s essay, “A Matter of Taste,” which explores what the Right needs to do to revive aesthetics, culture, and art.
Contributors discuss the core arguments of Jeremy Carl’s new book, The Unprotected Class: How Anti-White Racism Is Tearing America Apart.
If they don't act, white Americans will soon be subsidizing their own destruction.
Authors respond to Charles Kesler’s essay on national conservatism and American conservatism in the Winter 2023/4 Claremont Review of Books.
Not all nationalisms are created equal.
America cannot turn its back on a spacefaring future.
It currently incentivizes lawsuits and unfunded liabilities.
An economic weapon to best its magnet monopoly.
Tech for the American people.
A start toward true and lasting reform.
Red tape is failing diplomatic personnel.
Fifty clashing regulatory experiments will cripple U.S. national security.
Medicaid’s regulatory failures must be addressed.
The Optional Practical Training program must be reformed—or ended outright.
Now is the time to strike a partnership.
The Florida governor needs a better proposal on property taxes.
A roadmap for the Trump Administration.
Governors and legislators must cut through the web of managerial guilds.
It’ll require political will, statutory reform, and likely a trip to the Supreme Court.
Getting America’s schools back on track.
We can’t afford to overlook its potential to both educate and indoctrinate.
Senator Lee should introduce the New Frontier Homestead Act of 2026.
It must be rooted in prudence, guided by justice, and oriented to peace.
Tightening the screws on the guest-to-permanent-resident pipeline.
The GOP could finally deliver on its promises.
A market-driven path to national resilience.
Reformers should think twice before trying to immediately eliminate the DofEd.
Why Schedule F is necessary to fix software in government.
Higher education’s parasitic infrastructure must be eradicated before a healthy system can be established.
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