Tench Coxe was arguably one of the more obscure American Founding Fathers. Unlike Thomas Jefferson or Alexander Hamilton, he did not establish his own political philosophy and a political party to champion it. Although he served in the Federal Government… Read More ›
Philosophy
Update (26 February 2024)
Over the course of this week, I will be digging deeper into the works of Tench Coxe, who was a very colorful Founding Father and not highly remembered for some reason. When I mentioned him in the context of Chapter… Read More ›
On Sublation Media and Ideological Tendencies within Neoliberalism
In my spare time this week, I followed up on the latest content from Sublation Magazine and the videos available on their YouTube channel. As I had pointed out in The Work-Standard (3rd Ed.) and in today’s Update post, Sublation… Read More ›
A Reading of Julius Krein’s “America after Neoliberalism”
Hamiltonianism as an American Worldview is neither exclusive to the American Right nor exclusive to the American Left. The old Federalist Party, predating the ideologically straightlaced, mass mobilized parties of the 20th century, was diverse in terms of its intellectual… Read More ›
“Neither Left nor Right” in US Politics
Contemporary American politics at this stage in the 21st century has become increasingly differentiated from what came before in the past two, three or four decades. No longer is the political-economic discourse rigidly defined by an “American Left” pivoted toward… Read More ›
Hamiltonianism and Euroscepticism as Ideological Allies
Pan-Europeanism is in some respects a kind of “Pan-Nationalism” that came about in response to the circumstances surrounding the two World Wars. After arriving to the conclusion that other “Nationalisms” and “Socialisms” had ravaged Europe in the early 20th century,… Read More ›
A Reading of “Technology against Constitution”
Daniel Boyle’s “Technology Against Constitution” can be best described as one of the more insightful articles on the philosophical underpinnings of The American Post-Liberal. Its basic premise, drawing from the experiences of Ancient Greece, is based on the familiar notion… Read More ›
Will US Demographic Decline cause the Empire of Liberty’s Decline?
The Bipolarity which defined the entirety of the late 20th century was incapable of lasting forever. It is inevitable that control of world affairs by the US and the Soviet Union would lead to one of two possibilities: either the… Read More ›
A Reading of “The Corporation as a Command Economy (1997)”
There was a 1997 article, which later got republished online ten years ago, that I came across last week. The article in question was written by some Keynesian economic historian, Brad DeLong, who sought to address a question that has… Read More ›
Translating “Resurrection of the West” (Pt. II)
Recently, I read and tried to translate the third chapter of Dickel’s Resurrection of the West. The chapter in question was entitled “Das Abendland (The West),” which further explores Dickel’s own discussions and criticism of Spengler’s Decline of the West… Read More ›
You must be logged in to post a comment.