In their latest Foreign Affairs essay, National Security Council official Kurt Campbell and State Department China policy director Rush Doshi argue that the United States is underestimating the strategic threat posed by the People’s Republic of China and must build a...
Featured Articles
Trump Vindicates Horton’s Law
by Thomas Eddlem | May 14, 2025 | Featured Articles, Politics
Every president is a disappointment when compared to his predecessor; even, as in Donald Trump’s case today, when compared to himself. Trump 45 got an income tax reduction passed, while Trump 47 raised tariffs across the board. Trump 45 didn’t start any new wars,...
Britain’s Two Party System Cracks
by Owen Ashworth | May 13, 2025 | Featured Articles, Politics
The Reform Party romped their way to a thorough beat down of the uniparty in the recent British council elections. There were more than 1,600 council seats up for election, multiple mayoralties, and a seat for parliament. Reform dominated the narrative around the...
British-American Trade Deal Raises Questions About U.K. Food Standards
by Patrick Carroll | May 13, 2025 | Economics, Featured Articles
President Donald Trump announced a new trade deal between the United States and United Kingdom on Thursday that would drop certain trade barriers between the two countries. Though the details are still fuzzy, some of the main industries involved are agriculture, the...
Political Slavery in the COVID Era
by Jim Bovard | May 12, 2025 | Featured Articles
In 1977, East Germany ransomed hundreds of its leading intellectuals and artists to West Germany, partly because it did not wish to endure public criticism by its own citizens during an International Rights Conference. In spite of the human sale, there was no general...
A Masterclass in Sanitized Cruelty
by John Mac Ghlionn | May 12, 2025 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
In his recent piece for The Free Press, Michael Ames accuses others—journalists, NGOs, international aid agencies—of engaging in rhetorical manipulation. Yet the irony is almost unbearable: his own article is a masterclass in precisely that. Ames purports to clarify,...
TGIF: On the Importance of Undesigned Order
by Sheldon Richman | May 9, 2025 | Economics, Featured Articles, Sheldon Richman, TGIF
Carl Menger, the founder of the Austrian approach to economics, was not the first or last thinker to see similarities between a society and a living organism, suggesting the existence of undesigned, spontaneous order. The names Adam Ferguson and Adam Smith, before...
Bill Kristol vs. The Holy Father
by Jack Hunter | May 8, 2025 | Featured Articles, Foreign Policy
Recently when President Donald Trump shared an AI image of himself as the next pope in the wake of the death of Pope Francis, apparently in jest, it caused controversy. For neoconservative godson Bill Kristol, it created an opportunity to needle Vice President J.D....