The stock market’s collapse in 1929 and the ensuing Great Depression put to rest any shame of going on the government dole. Yet the New Deal’s liberal social ideas could…
In his latest book, Matt Palumbo explains the origins and rise to power of the fact-checking industry, the major players in it, and their uniform ideological bend toward the Left.
In "Stolen Youth: How Radicals are Erasing Innocence and Indoctrinating a Generation," Bethany Mandel and New York Post columnist Karol Markowicz detail the alarming shifts toward ideological indoctrination in education…
Those with little or no background in that history can gain it from Waging a Good War. The writing isn’t awful when it sticks to the story, rather than the…
Rick's military history approach comes off as just a vehicle to score some historical and contemporary points. For example, he wrote, “The same antidemocratic faction of American life that opposed…
The clumsy military clichés and analogies in Waging a Good War also caused Ricks to veer into incongruous criticisms of the individuals who waged the good war. In one example,…
How to Save the West, the debut book from Claremont Institute editor and podcast host Spencer Klavan, sets itself an impossible task with its title—one its author tacitly admits in…
The current equivalent of America’s First Estate clerisy, including that of it in establishment philanthropy, should self-awarely take cognitive-elite note of and understand the contemporary rise of this populist anti-establishment…
"America and the Art of the Possible" broadly sketches how American elites have prospered while the middle class has stagnated during the past half century—calling into serious question what at…
"Justice Corrupted" is a love letter of sorts to the American justice system by way of examining how and when it’s suffered abuse at the hands of politicians, left and…