Lexington and Concord Moves South

When America’s Founding Fathers conceived of our republic, they drew extensively on the experiences of the Greek and the Roman republics of old. An important lesson was that monarchies, aristocracies, oligarchies, and pure democracies were a bad idea and should be avoided, a key point made by the Greek historian Polybius.            Read more…

Statesmanship

Politicians—I know, I was one once—are particularly gifted at identifying self-interests. They do it all the time. It should come as no surprise to note that with every vote, legislators wonder, occasionally in public but mostly in private, “how will the people respond to the vote I just made?” It’s a selfish Read more…

Great-Souled

I am reading, thinking, and writing a lot these days. In many ways it keeps me going as I watch in shock and horror how our norms are being disrupted by illogic, whim, and dangerous ideas, all of which will do little to sustain our culture, our civilization, indeed our country. Why Read more…

Revealing the Right Path

We live in a time of proliferating frauds. Moreover, we must recognize them if we are to save our grandchildren from crushing national debt, address racism honestly, embrace substance over symbolism, expose the truth about progressivism, and save our Constitution from destruction. The frauds are many. Consider a few. Something for Nothing: As a Read more…

Tick-Tock

Having spent a season of my life in elected politics, I have become very aware that political fortunes swing like a pendulum in a clock. And if you have a grandfather clock, as we do in our house, the pendulum swings slowly and methodically until the clock winds down. So too does Read more…

Guilty As Sin

The recent and tragic death of George Floyd, a black man, by a white police officer in Minnesota is the latest in a series of controversies concerning race and law enforcement in America. Floyd has now become a poignant symbol of what people say is “systemic racism” in America. So is racism Read more…