Menâs Realism
The masculinity crisis is serious but most solutions on offer are not
The masculinity crisis is serious but most solutions on offer are not
Without careful management, large-scale farming might ignore our responsibility to pass on this earth better than we found it.
With every step away towards a pure market logic and away from physical communities and lived-in traditions, the sporting world will find that the magic and allure of what has made them so compelling start to disappear.
Take a deep breath and hold it for ten seconds. Imagine doing that over and over again, 31,536,000 times, not knowing where your children were. That’s ten yearsâor as long as my daughter was separated from her two disabled sons after their non-custodial father abducted them.
Olmstead has created a work of lyric subversion, luring you in with glowing prose while slowly unveiling the depth of her critique.
My American Dream feels stolen, like I purchased it with the blood of brothers and enemies.
American society suffers from de-composition and de-consolidation. This isolation makes us less resilient and more vulnerable. And it also makes us less stable and more susceptible to ideological infections.
The American Dreamâpeople have hung on to those three little words for decades, passed them down for generations. But itâs hard to see how we can believe in the dream right now.
For too long we have let memories we cherishâof farms and farmers, of homesteads and pioneers, of cowboys on the range and Native Americans hunting the great herdsâdisguise how much we have lost and abandoned.
One way of reading a story of American discontent is in its newspapers. Not just in their pages, but in how their ongoing decline illustrates broader tendencies fueling popular frustration.
Iâm writing this as a letter because weâve often had this conversation aloud, but this lets you return to it at your leisure. Nothing that I say here will be new to you, but Iâm writing this so that others can read it, too. Because thereâs something to the intergenerational warfare narrative of our moment, it is fitting to frame these issues as a grown childâs reflection on the status of his parents.
In his introduction to the âHome Buildingâ forum on American Compass, Oren Cass opens by drawing upon Ronald Reaganâs warning that the American culture of freedom must be renewed in Read more…
Our country, we tell ourselves, is a place where anyone can make it if they study enough, and where the smartest rise to the top. Grow up in a sad town with only empty lots where factories used to be? Hit the books, spend your days in the library memorizing dates, equations, and working out that brain.
âUnity is the path forward.â That was the leitmotif of Joe Biden inaugural address. Itâs easy to be skeptical about such appeals, given how divided our country has become. And easier still to be cynical, given the flurry of executive orders immediately after his inauguration, many of which intensified rather than moderated battles over morality and culture.
In popular parlance an âapocalypseâ means an epic disaster. As a simple transliteration of Greek (apocalypsis) the literal meaning is more pedestrian: âuncovering,â or to use a fancier word, ârevelation.â But one understands the popular sense, for it is often unsettling (or worse) when the true nature of things is revealed. This is the case in last book of the New Testament, which bears the name Apocalypse.
There can be no doubt that Trump gave the press the back of his hand. His refusal to kowtow to upscale media brands offended the vanity of high-level reporters, editors, Read more…
On June 1, early in the BLM uproar, I went to Union Square to view a protest march. The empty concrete canyons echoed with chants as two or three thousand people walked past. Clench-jawed Deputy Commissioner Terrance Monahan brought up the rear, flanked by ranks of police officers
As large swaths of the country prepare to re-enter COVID-19 lockdownsâmy current city of Denver, for instance, banned all indoor dining just last weekâit is worth pausing to again lament the ham-fisted, blunderbuss nature of most of these virus-fighting measures.
As counting continues and lawyers gear up for courtroom battles, Election Day now looks to become Election Week, and maybe even Election Month.
In the weeks leading up to Amy Coney Barrettâs confirmation as Supreme Court Justice, much was written about the new conservative feminism that Barrett arguably embodies. But as Ross Douthat asked in his column at The New York Times, âcan there be a conservative feminism thatâs distinctive, coherent and influential, at least beyond quirky religious subcultures like the faculty at the University of Notre Dame?â
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