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Nathan Pinkoski
Is liberalism giving way to something new? The most notable contemporary case for postliberalism, Patrick Deneen’s Why Liberalism Failed, has four tacit assumptions: First, America is in decline. Second, liberalism is responsible for this decline. Third, liberalism is collapsing under the . . . . Continue Reading »
Beginning with his essay “The Flight 93 Election,” published by the Claremont Review of Books in September 2016, Michael Anton has become famous—and infamous—as the foremost intellectual defender of the current president. One can read his new book, The Stakes: America . . . . Continue Reading »
Do the managerial experts performing within the drama of this crisis have an adequate understanding of the hierarchy of human goods? Continue Reading »
Every year, France’s Ministry of Culture publishes an official volume to commemorate major anniversaries in French history, covering past events as well as the lives of prominent personalities. Assembled by a team of historians and approved by the Ministry, the list mixes victories and failures, . . . . Continue Reading »
Canadian postmodern nationalism makes Americans the enemy, but is friendly to American ideology. Continue Reading »
There is a desire in France to continue the heritage that preceded us, and which must continue after us. Continue Reading »
The Fifth Republic has only been successful when its president has both embodied noblesse oblige and sustained its populist element. Continue Reading »
Since the 1980s, the French left and right have formed a front républicain or cordon sanitaire to keep the Front national (FN) out of power. When Jean-Marie Le Pen’s daughter Marine took over the party in 2011, she understood that the only road to electoral success . . . . Continue Reading »
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