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Back to All Issues
May/June 2022
Cover Story
The Decline and Fall of NASCAR
Wells King
April 20, 2022
America’s most Southern sport has betrayed its own fan base.
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Front Lines
The China Initiative Wasn’t Racist
Arthur Bloom
April 27, 2022
Woke lobbying made the DOJ end a successful program aimed at our biggest counterintelligence threat.
The Press Fumbles Again on Ukraine
Ted Galen Carpenter
May 2, 2022
Coverage of the Ukraine crisis has been as biased as anything in the run-up to previous wars.
The Decline of Michael Moore
Peter Tonguette
May 26, 2022
The filmmaker is a Midwestern populist whose heart, if not his head, was often in the right place.
Putin’s Mirror Image
Chilton Williamson Jr.
June 1, 2022
It’s not paranoia if your regime really is fragile.
It Takes A Village
Bradley Devlin
April 29, 2022
How a small town mayor has led Hungary’s effort to help Ukrainian refugees.
The Power of Weakness
William S. Lind
May 31, 2022
In combat, sometimes it is better to be David than Goliath.
Commentary
General Milley's War
Patrick J. Buchanan
Life During Wartime
Bill Kauffman
May 5, 2022
Our America—the real thing, not the abstraction—will endure. It will not be unplaced, not as long as we love it.
The Two Faces of Originalism
Matthew Schmitz
May 20, 2022
Scholars of various persuasions have denounced John Eastman in harsh terms while admitting
sotto voce
that he might have half a point.
Features
The Donbas Rebels in Their Own Words
Dimitri A. Simes
April 25, 2022
April 12, 2014, started out as just another typical day for the eastern Ukrainian town of Slavyansk. At 9 a.m., a dark green truck surrounded by…
The Weather Above Ground
Scott McConnell
May 23, 2022
What used to be radicalism is now the reigning ideology of America's major cities.
Lawyers Cause Homelessness
Mark Pulliam
May 18, 2022
The
Boise
case proves that pro bono litigation is not always “for the public good.”
Promises Must Be Kept
Brad Littlejohn
May 12, 2022
What the early 20th-century American statesman Henry Cabot Lodge can teach us about our failure in Ukraine.
Christian Realism v. the Simulation World
Michael Warren Davis
June 7, 2022
Common sense may be wrong, but isn’t it funny that, especially in modern times, Christians are the great champions of common sense?
Arts & Letters
The Bone-Locker’s Speech
Margot Enns
May 13, 2022
A new study of the Old English language reveals a culture and a world at once distant and strangely familiar.
The Rise and Fall of the Conservative Movement
Declan Leary
April 22, 2022
Matthew Continetti's new history of the right tracks American conservatism from the introduction to the expulsion of its liberal element.
Silver Screen, Red Scare
Helen Andrews
June 8, 2022
The tale of how Hollywood and Red China came together may be fascinating, but it is already out of date.
Up From Originalism
Ismail Royer
May 11, 2022
Adrian Vermeule's
Common Good Constitutionalism
gives us a glimpse of how law was understood in an earlier age.
Picasso’s Blue Period
Joseph Phelan
May 6, 2022
An exhibit of Pablo Picasso's Blue Period work displays some of the artist's most melancholy paintings.
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