Living in a free society shapes people in ways that tyrants like Vladimir Putin can hardly understand.
Book Reviews
Fresh commentary on some of the most important books in law, politics, and culture.
Hussar Cut presents the case for the Hungarian strategy and the philosophy behind it.
Tara Burton’s latest novel takes readers to a darkly magical place where the boundaries between worlds blur.
Can the West today learn valuable lessons from Habsburg family lore? Probably not.
Past Reviews
It's time to stop inflicting therapy on kids who don't need it.
When economists lose interest in price theory, policymakers return to familiar mistakes.
A hugely woke company came face to face with the reality that misinformation spread on Facebook impacted voter’s decisions.
Limitarianism defends the deeply illiberal—but increasingly common—instinct to eliminate the wealthy.
Like the evangelicals he criticizes, Tim Alberta struggles to see politics operating between the sacred and the sordid.
Take your work-life balance and shove it.
Reagan placed fusionism at the center of his efforts for American renewal.
What motivates an educated woman to have seven children?
Does Sebastian Morello really want religious establishment, or just a conservatism that respects religious faith?
The Hebrew Bible was written to weld the defeated inhabitants of Judah and Samaria together into a unified people.
Breyer makes unsupported claims about originalism and defends a brand of legal interpretation that would obfuscate the law.
A little-known classical liberal from Iceland has helped to spread Hayek's ideas.
Milton Friedman's contributions to economics and public policy have left an indelible mark on our world.
The Jewish State has agonized over the rules of war and the treatment of civilians more profoundly than any policy in history.