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 ›
Michael Lind
A Reading of Michael Lind’s “Forget the Founding Fathers”
What would the Founding Fathers think of today’s America? How would they advise us to address the great domestic and foreign challenges of our time? Would they be proud of contemporary Americans for preserving their handiwork, or would they despair… Read More ›
A Reading of “How to Transform US Politics—and How Not To”
In an America where so much of what passes as political-economic discourse is thoroughly Jeffersonianism, what are the most fundamental characteristics of Hamiltonianism? Hamiltonianism stresses that political-economic power belongs to the Union–the American people, whose Sovereignty is enshrined in the… Read More ›
Final Reflections on The Third Place
To begin, I must confess that in spite of countless setbacks and time constraints outside of the Blog, I was able to complete the First Edition of The Third Place amidst significant obstacles. One of those challenges, as I had… Read More ›
The Third Place: Are There Two American Dreams?
The historical development of American Suburbia occurred rapidly in the years and decades after 1945. Thanks to cheap Kapital being borrowed at low Interest Rates, Americans were able to afford a higher standard of living commensurate as the rationing on… Read More ›
Book of interest: Michael Lind, “The New Class War”
Michael Lind (not to be confused with the military theoretician and paleoconservative Robert Lind) is a professor of public policy at the LBJ School of Government at U. Texas, Austin. He’s not a movement conservative or libertarian, but his book… Read More ›
Conservative Socialism: Lind’s Critiques of Jeffersonianism (Pt. II of II)
The statistical data used to justify the so-called “Great Replacement Theory” in the US can be traced as far back as the 1990s. Back in the 1990s, there were demographers who were anticipating that America’s English Protestants would no longer… Read More ›
Conservative Socialism: Lind’s Critiques of Jeffersonianism (Pt. I of II)
Earlier today, I had been reading the latest articles of Michael Lind in the American Jewish publication known as Tablet Magazine. Catching up on his writings, there has been a number of noteworthy articles which I felt were worthy of… Read More ›
Conservative Socialism: The Infantile Sicknesses of ‘Leftism’ and ‘Rightism’
“[Jeffersonianism] spares no pains in promoting the belief that it does not exist, but the success of its disappearing act depends on equally strenuous efforts on the part of an American public anxious to believe in egalitarian fictions and unwilling… Read More ›
America: “A More Perfect ‘Europe?'”
My fellow Americans, what makes these United States so different from the rest of the Americas? Is it because we are a very complex “society” with an equally complex history spanning four centuries? Is it because we are “wealthier” than… Read More ›
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