sábado, 6 de octubre de 2018



by Carson Holloway on September 30th, 2018
The country’s ruling elites misunderstood or ignored the concerns of a significant segment of the electorate. The Great Revolt suggests that those elites should move beyond lamenting the misfortune (to them) of Trump’s elevation to the presidency and ponder the mistakes on their part that made it possible.



by Arthur Goldberg on October 1st, 2018
Unmoored from a committed and loving marital relationship, the unchecked sex drive harms both the individual and the society in which he or she lives.


by Adam J. MacLeod on October 2nd, 2018
Our Constitution is not just positive law, stipulated and contingent on political will. American constitutions do incorporate pre-positive law, often expressly. And that law is neither mere text, nor axioms, nor political ideals. The first in a two-part series.


by Randall Smith on October 3rd, 2018
Justice is something we must establish every day—in the way we live with others, in the way we speak humbly and attend to all the facts patiently, in deference to reality and the truth of things.



by Adam J. MacLeod on October 4th, 2018
Understood as an expression of the common law commitments on which it was built, our Constitution still supplies common terms in which we might re-transform our civic discourse into something rational and productive. The second in a two-part series.
Facebook
Facebook
Twitter
Twitter
RSS Feed
RSS Feed
Copyright © 2018 The Witherspoon Institute, all rights reserved.
Support Public Discourse by making a secure donation to the Witherspoon Institute.

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario