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Ben Franklin, The Albany Plan, and the Heart of American Consensus

May 9, 2023
Guy Chet

Benjamin Franklin has avoided the fate of the other Founding Fathers in that he has not become a target for historians. People like George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, even Robert Morris – the entire starting line-up of the American Revolution – have all become enmeshed in ideological and political conflicts, in their […]

Book Review: The Classical and Christian Origins of American Politics

April 28, 2023
Darren Patrick Guerra

The following is a review of The Classical and Christian Origins of American Politics: Political Theology, Natural Law, and the American Founding, by Kody W. Cooper and Justin Buckley Dyer (Cambridge University Press, 2022). An enduring challenge in politics is how to achieve a strong and unified community amidst cultural and religious diversity. From ancient […]

Classical Republicanism, Lockean Liberalism, and the Creation of the American Republic

April 24, 2023
Gregory Spindler

As several scholars, like Bernard Bailyn, Caroline Robbins, and Gordon Wood, have reminded us, a number of ideological influences have played a significant role in the creation of the American republic. Among them were two opposing concepts that were at the center of the Founders’ debate over the meaning of republicanism in America. One was […]

Burke and Adams: Tradition vs. Constitutionalism

December 16, 2022
Gregory Spindler

In his 1953 classic The Conservative Mind, Russell Kirk stresses what he sees as the remarkable similarity in political thinking between Edmund Burke, the “Father of Western Conservatism,” and John Adams, often referred to as the first great American conservative.  Kirk asserts that “it is difficult to draw any clear line of demarcation” between the […]

Progressive and Regressive: The Evolving Treatment of Indigenous Americans in Zane Grey’s ‘The Vanishing American’

December 8, 2022
Frank Scheide

The 1925 silent film adaptation of Zane Grey’s popular novel, The Vanishing American, is correctly considered a benchmark in the evolution of the cinematic treatment of Indigenous Americans, in part, because of its contemporaneity. Set in the early 20th century rather than the 19th, this film made audiences aware of the valor of Indigenous Americans […]

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Taxing the Constitution: Are Trump’s Proposed Tariffs Legal?

October 29, 2024

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