History
Free Markets, Deregulation, and Blame
Free markets, in the full sense of the phrase, exist only in the minds and imaginations of free-market economists from the Austrian School,...
Pope Pius XII: Hero in the Unmaking
The word “hero” so often conjures up images of the brash and the bold. We may think of Audie Murphy’s WWII exploits, the...
Read more1960: A Year That Changed America
The lives of most Americans in 1960 were markedly different from a decade earlier in at least one significant respect. A great many...
Read moreNullification in a Nutshell
The “Principles of 98,” as they came to be known, are rarely discussed in modern history lectures even though these are integral to...
Read moreValentine Tribute to Sir William Blackstone
Most people identify February 14 with Valentine's Day, a holiday confined mostly to the red end of the spectrum and filled with chocolate,...
Read moreThe Crusades: When Christendom Pushed Back
The year is 732 A.D., and Europe is under assault. Islam, born a mere 110 years earlier, is already in its adolescence, and...
Read moreMartin Luther King: The Celebration of a Myth
NAACP chairman Julian Bond said last week that the Dr. Martin Luther King we celebrate is an “anesthetized” version of the man who...
Read moreThe Killing Field at Malmedy
Forty-five years ago, former SS troops gathered by the thousands. Old friends emerged from self-inflicted obscurity. Many, intent on still concealing their less-than-positive...
Read moreNixon Library Releases Cache of Presidential Papers
It wasn’t just Oval Office tape recordings that Richard Nixon wanted to get rid of. According to documents made public last week, the...
Read moreJohn Colter: The First Mountain Man
The sinewy, bearded man raced up the brushy hillside, blood streaming from his nose from the terrific exertion. He did not consider himself...
Read moreThe King Still Works for Uncle Sam
Great legends are often built on the ashes of someone's destruction — whether figurative or literal. Competition is often a zero-sum game. One...
Read moreForgotten Influences of the Founders
Our own Founding Fathers were convinced, and history has proven them prescient, that they were building a new and everlasting republic that would...
Read more1914 and Christmas: What Might Have Been
As Americans come to dread the increasingly bromidic nature of the festive season (where, that is, they are still allowed to celebrate Christmas...
Read moreGeorge Washington’s First Final Farewell
A generation after George Washington’s Christmastime farewell to his troops and to the Congress who commissioned him in 1775, Clement Clarke Moore penned...
Read morePearl Harbor: A True Day of Infamy
On December 7, 1941, the Japanese Navy launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. But was the surprise attack really a "surprise"? The...
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