Trump, India, and the China Hawks’ Horror

Trump, India, and the China Hawks’ Horror

For more than two decades, Washington labored to bring India closer—easing sanctions, opening high-tech trade, recognizing India as a responsible nuclear power, and embedding it in U.S.-led Indo-Pacific strategy. From President George W. Bush’s civil nuclear deal and Barack Obama’s endorsement of a United Nations Security Council seat, to the Quad revival under Donald Trump’s first term and the technology initiatives of the Joe Biden years, U.S. policy showed remarkable bipartisan continuity. The goal was clear: position India as a democratic counterweight to China. Yet, since January 2025,...

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Washington’s Fiscal Doom-Loop

Washington’s Fiscal Doom-Loop

With U.S. gross debt now at a staggering $37 trillion—roughly equivalent to the combined debt of all other major advanced economies—Washington is trapped in a fiscal doom loop of its own making. Decades of bipartisan overspending have pushed the nation to a point where a mere 1% increase in mean Treasury interest rates adds $370 billion to annual debt service costs. The arithmetic is unforgiving. Yet, Donald Trump's second administration is doubling down, pursuing policies that risk accelerating the crisis. Consider the following combination: President Trump’s push for the Federal Reserve to...

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John Locke and the Two Streams of Liberalism

John Locke and the Two Streams of Liberalism

The Late Middle Ages, Renaissance, and Enlightenment bequeathed to the Western world two basic springs of political thought. Both emerged from a common source: the rejection of divine-right monarchy, feudal hierarchy, and the suffocating weight of hereditary authority. Both, in their ways, extolled the dignity of the individual and the promise of human freedom. Yet from this same source, the waters quickly diverged. One stream ran toward the principles we now associate with classical liberalism: limited government, secure property rights, voluntary exchange, and the conviction that liberty...

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Contra Colby

Contra Colby

So sick of liberal hegemony, critics of Washington’s foreign policy have long been apt to seize at anything that promises something, anything, different. Hence the vigorous applause directed towards anyone who doesn’t mindlessly embrace every single one of the blob’s wars. One of the most prominent in the second Donald Trump administration is Elbridge Colby, current Under Secretary of Defense for Policy, who has drawn the predictable beltway ire for reviews of Ukraine aid and AUKUS, among other things. But here’s the problem with Elbridge Colby, and everyone else like him, from the...

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The Myth of European Plunder

The Myth of European Plunder

Among a certain species of “critical” historian, it is an article of faith that Europe’s remarkable economic ascent was built not on its institutions, not on liberty, not on commerce, but on the systematic looting of the rest of the world. In this telling—descended from the anti-imperialist rhetoric of the 1960s New Left—Europe’s “miracle” was a simple matter of taking what didn’t belong to it, whether gold and silver from the Americas, spices from the Indies, or raw materials from Africa and Asia. This narrative has the advantage of being emotionally satisfying to those looking to discredit...

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William F. Buckley (Properly) Remembered

William F. Buckley (Properly) Remembered

To memorialize William F. Buckley Jr., as Sam Tanenhaus does in his recent biography and Charles King does in his review, is to celebrate the betrayal of the American conservative tradition. This betrayal was not incidental to Buckley’s career—it was its defining achievement. For all the ink spilled in celebration of Buckley’s wit, style, and institutional success, the substance of his legacy is unmistakable: he was the man most responsible for snuffing out the Old Right, and in its place erecting the managerial, warfare-welfare conservatism that still strangles American political life....

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Conflicts, Deals, and Humanitarian Crises Across the Board

Conflicts, Deals, and Humanitarian Crises Across the Board

Across multiple conflict zones—from the mineral-rich hills of eastern Congo to the contested temple sites on the Thailand-Cambodia border—a familiar pattern emerges: foreign intervention complicates and often worsens already volatile situations. In recent years, American diplomatic efforts, especially under the Trump administration, have produced headline-grabbing agreements while sidestepping the structural causes of conflict. Whether through strategic alignments, economic opportunism, or misguided humanitarianism, Washington’s involvement has frequently undermined peace and sovereignty. A...

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Industrial Capitalism and Its Critics

Industrial Capitalism and Its Critics

The nineteenth century marked the most dramatic leap forward in human welfare ever witnessed. It was a century defined not by aristocrats or emperors, but by coal, cotton, contracts, and capitalists. In his lectures “War, Peace, and the Industrial Revolution” and “The New World of Capitalism,” historian Ralph Raico masterfully outlined how capitalism, industrialization, and free trade shattered the stagnant feudal order and lifted hundreds of millions from abject poverty. Despite the predictable outcry from the old regime—the landed aristocracy, royal monopolists, and reactionary...

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