America Was Not Stolen
by Mark BauerleinJeffrey Fynn-Paul joins in to discuss his book Not Stolen: The Truth About European Colonialism in the New World. Continue Reading »
Jeffrey Fynn-Paul joins in to discuss his book Not Stolen: The Truth About European Colonialism in the New World. Continue Reading »
Michael Barone joins the podcast to discuss his new book Mental Maps of the Founders. Continue Reading »
Over the past three weeks, it has become obvious that Synod-2023 is largely an assembly of Church professionals, and a narrow band of Church professionals at that. Continue Reading »
Howard Zinn’s A People’s History of the United States aspired to be a full-spectrum telling of American history as one long sordid tale of oppression and the resistance to it. Dedicated to a merciless critique of all authority and power, the book extolled and romanticized the victims, . . . . Continue Reading »
Bruce Gilley joins the podcast to discuss his new book, The Last Imperialist: Sir Alan Burns's Epic Defense of the British Empire. Continue Reading »
Does anyone believe in astrology anymore? Is there anyone who still really thinks that our destinies are written in the sky? The answer is probably no. Maybe there’s some ancient black-clad Armenian peasant woman consulting an almanac every time she crosses the street—but for everyone else, . . . . Continue Reading »
Hostility toward the Electoral College hints at a deeper impatience with our political process. Continue Reading »
The result of mass migration will not be civilization’s enhancement, but its destruction. Continue Reading »
It is tempting to think of Las Casas as a voice crying in the wilderness, but in fact his campaign of denunciation brought him worldly success and the favor of the establishment. Continue Reading »
Alienation and Freedom by frantz fanon edited by jean khalfa and robert j. c. young translated by steven corcoran bloomsbury academic, 816 pages, $29.95 In the ferment of the present moment, with its surging floods of migrants and its ostensibly gratuitous but historically . . . . Continue Reading »