Tucker Carlson, Class Traitor
by Wilfred M. McClayIn his thirty-year journalistic career, Tucker Carlson hasn’t changed. But his industry has—beyond recognition. Continue Reading »
In his thirty-year journalistic career, Tucker Carlson hasn’t changed. But his industry has—beyond recognition. Continue Reading »
In a race everyone expected to be close, Virginia Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe lost to multimillionaire political neophyte Glenn Youngkin by over two points. Continue Reading »
In Sweden, conservatism has long been associated with dingy, smoke-infested rooms filled with schnapps-imbibing reactionaries. Yet in the last few years, conservatism has started to grab the attention of the Swedish people. Continue Reading »
The Canadian electoral system handicaps parties based on principle, rewards regional parties to the detriment of national unity, discourages voter turnout, and entrenches two historic parties despite their lack of majority support. Continue Reading »
Your support has helped First Things promote the side of the unborn, the side of natural law, the side of gratitude. Continue Reading »
Malta is one of the last countries in the world where abortion is illegal, but pro-abortion activists are trying to change that. Continue Reading »
To understand the Internet you need both: Lockwood’s diptych of cloud and clarity, and Basu’s chaos mosaic. Continue Reading »
The sluggish, tepid approach to a crisis of Eucharistic coherence that Cardinal Ladaria urges on the U.S. bishops is badly misconceived. Continue Reading »
“One of the gravest errors of our time is the dichotomy between the faith which many profess and the practice of their daily lives.” Continue Reading »
The road from the polymathic Edward A. Said to today’s leftism is one marked by intellectual decline. Continue Reading »