Why was Leonard Bernstein so exquisitely sensitive to tempo and pitch, and so insensitive to people?
Punishing the Innocent
Recent
Have Classical schools become a right-wing recruiting ground?
Two broad political inclinations underlie and complicate our political practice and language.
It is painfully obvious that meaningful appreciation of the economic past is lacking. And that ignorance has consequences outside the academy.
El Salvador has become accustomed to the idea that Bukele is above its failing constitution.
Conservatives know that there is not one simple narrative capable of encapsulating the complexity of the human soul.
These days, individuality is challenged by those who seek to slap a label on you, to lump you into one category or another.
One of the most insightful figures in postwar conservatism has been forgotten in our age of political chaos.
Corruption and economic centralization are a match made in hell.
A newsletter worth reading.
The past two decades on the American right have been an extended exercise in mapping out Hayek's road to serfdom.
California’s new cultural competency requirement for pharmacists is totalitarianism based on the hierarchy of race, sex, and gender.
Patricia Highsmith and her character Tom Ripley both lived behind metaphysical masks.
Market discipline is possible only with rules that make it clear to all concerned who is offering the best value to patients.
Today's Academic Left are people of action, not ideas.
Government interventions, in attempting to artificially allocate resources, actually help fuel inequality.