Pete Spiliakos is a columnist for First Things.
If Republicans were truly serious about extending the natural rights thinking of the Founders and explaining it to the public, wouldn’t they start with late-term abortion on demand? That is far less abstract than (for instance) the relationship of the Obamacare mandate to the . . . . Continue Reading »
Well, I’m home with a sick kid who is trying to take a nap, so while I’ve got a moment, 1. Peter Lawler says: I dont agree with Yuval that the pursuit of happiness is replaced by collective effort. That does sound kind of socialist or fascist, but the . . . . Continue Reading »
I agree with Paul Seaton in this thread. The move from “liberal” to “progressive” was mostly a branding response to changing public understanding of the term “liberal.” I can’t find it right now, but in David Frum’s book on the 1970s he wrote about . . . . Continue Reading »
Catastrophic Care: How American Health Care Killed My Father — And How We Can Fix It by David Goldhill has a good chance to be the Losing Ground of the health care debate. Since he identifies as a Democrat, I don’t think Goldhill would like the comparison, but Murray’s book was a . . . . Continue Reading »
Peter Lawler rightly said: “But its impossible not to admire the ambitious move from We hold these truths to We, the people. Or from “We, the people” to his policy agenda. It is interesting how he makes a point to ground himself in . . . . Continue Reading »
Occasioned by Peter Lawler’s trenchant thoughts, 1. Obama took office during a combination deep recession and banking crisis. You would expect corporate profits to recover absent a 1930s-style deflationary cycle + collapse of the banking system. Ben Bernanke might have gotten some things . . . . Continue Reading »
Josh Marshall writes: But a huge amount of the current gun debate, the argument for the gun-owning tribe, amounts to the gun culture invading my area, my culture, my part of the country. That is where I think that Marshall goes wrong in his whole essay. No part of the country belongs to his . . . . Continue Reading »
Roberta Costa and Andrew Stiles have written an interesting and mostly heartening article about the House Republican retreat. The House Republicans seem to be asking a lot of the right questions. One section pulled me up a little short: Minority outreach is a priority. Greg Walden, who is . . . . Continue Reading »
So I saw the science fiction movie Looper a couple of weeks ago. A lot of stuff is going on. Some of it is time travel stuff and it gets kind of complicated, but I want to focus a bit on the family dynamics. The two main male characters become mass murderers in response to losing their mothers. One . . . . Continue Reading »
I can’t quote chapter and verse, but sometime after Barry Goldwater’s defeat, William F. Buckley wrote that the political problem for conservatives was that there were not enough political conservatives. Whatever Goldwater’s flaws as a candidate, and whatever the difficulties that . . . . Continue Reading »
influential
journal of
religion and
public life
Subscribe
Latest Issue
Support First Things