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Back to All Issues
September/October 2021
Cover Story
Going Back to Cincinnati
James Pogue
August 23, 2021
I had my first beer in the house where J.D. Vance lives now. Will our hometown send him to the Senate?
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Front Lines
The Angst of a Post-9/11 Liberal
Andrew J. Bacevich
September 6, 2021
Ben Rhodes’s chastened account of American power would be wiser if it were less partisan.
Bogdanovich’s Masterpiece
Peter Tonguette
September 29, 2021
The Last Picture Show is not only as unremittingly bleak as any great film ever made in America but also startlingly prescient.
The Consultancy Scam
Ross Marchand
September 27, 2021
How taxpayer-funded private reports encourage boondoggles and fuel government waste.
The Republic’s Glue Loses Its Stickiness
Darel E. Paul
September 20, 2021
An expansionary foreign policy used to paper over divisions at home, but no longer.
War Games
William S. Lind
Commentary
Is America Becoming a Failed State?
Patrick J. Buchanan
All Mod Cons
Bill Kauffman
October 11, 2021
Don't fortify the nation-state at the expense of its towns and cities and neighborhoods.
Facing Wokeness in the Workplace
Matthew Schmitz
August 30, 2021
Some are pushing back against the left's politicization of everything. But will it be enough?
Features
Saving the Russian Main Street
Gabriel Gavin
August 25, 2021
While Big Tech is killing American small businesses, Russia has resisted.
Conservatives for the Fairness Doctrine
Nate Hochman
September 1, 2021
Could a radio regulation repealed by the Reagan admin point to solutions for contemporary problems with Big Tech?
America’s Two-Front Cold War
Ted Galen Carpenter
September 13, 2021
A course correction is urgently needed, and it should begin with a much less belligerent policy toward Russia.
The Bitcoin President
Christian Britschgi
August 20, 2021
El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele takes an ironically authoritarian approach to cryptocurrency.
The Resilient Parish Buildings of Quebec
Madeline Johnson
September 15, 2021
Church properties survive secularization by finding new ways to serve their neighborhoods.
Casino Capitalism, Literally
Helen Andrews
October 4, 2021
When gambling—excuse me, “gaming”—was normalized, we lost a vital moral dimension to our ideas of political economy.
Arts & Letters
River Warrior
David Randall
October 13, 2021
We have no Churchills—Churchill, the grandson of a duke, wore the uniform of his king and he heard bullets whine.
A Rapture Deferred
Nick Burns
September 22, 2021
The American life and Hellenic ambition of Greek prime minister Andreas Papandreou.
Rewriting History for the New Cold War
Ian Dowbiggin
August 28, 2021
A Bard College professor has produced a sweeping, revisionist history of the Second World War that places the blame at Russia's doorstep.
Miss Pymska
John Wilson
October 9, 2021
Barbara Pym lived life with a luxuriant bent toward fantasy.
The Forgotten Medici
Joseph Phelan
August 21, 2021
Review: "The Medici: Portraits and Politics, 1512–1570," Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC, June to October 2021
Jonathan Franzen Goes Victorian
Nic Rowan
September 8, 2021
The novelist's latest work shines, but only because he’s finally snuffed his ego.
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