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Back to All Issues
September/October 2023
Cover Story
The Other Populist in the Race
Harry Scherer
August 14, 2023
RFK Jr. is Trump’s temperamental opposite—melancholic, reflective, sincere—but they appeal to many of the same voters.
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Front Lines
Featured in the August 2023 issue
These Jobs Are Going, Boys
Gavin Hamrick
August 14, 2023
Bruce Springsteen’s hometown loses its last major factory, outsourced to Mexico and Brazil.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
The Goya of the Infantry
David Randall
August 14, 2023
Cartoonist Bill Mauldin won a Pulitzer and made General Patton furious but today is unknown.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Destroying Canada’s Farms, for What?
Christopher Brunet
August 14, 2023
Carbon taxes make Canada’s farms uncompetitive in return for little environmental benefit.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
John Paul II’s Enduring Legacy
Bradley Devlin
August 14, 2023
He was the closest thing the church has had to an American pope.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
John Milius in His Time
Peter Tonguette
August 14, 2023
There is so much more to the great conservative director than Red Dawn.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Screens of Satan
William S. Lind
August 14, 2023
Images on screens are causing history to run backwards toward paganism.
Commentary
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Back to Nebraska With Bruce
Bill Kauffman
August 14, 2023
Bruce Springsteen’s album of American despair remains an arresting collection of stories by a literate and thoughtful depressive.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Nietzscheans and Normies
Matthew Schmitz
August 14, 2023
The government uses the radicals of the online right to justify cracking down on the free speech of ordinary conservatives.
Features
Featured in the August 2023 issue
The Trident and the Turul Bird
Will Collins
August 11, 2023
The Hungarians of Transcarpathia pose awkward questions for Ukraine’s Western backers.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Patronage for Progressives
Jonathan Ireland
August 14, 2023
Liberal cities keep handing multi-million-dollar contracts to unqualified, criminal-led nonprofits.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Reparations by Stealth
Thomas Flanagan
August 14, 2023
Class action lawsuits by Indigenous litigants meet no resistance from Canada’s federal government, resulting in tens of billions in payouts.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Battle on Bourbon Street
William Wolfe
August 14, 2023
The 2023 Southern Baptist Convention Annual Meeting rejected women pastors—but the fight is not over.
Arts & Letters
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Why Bill Watterson Vanished
Nic Rowan
August 14, 2023
The creator of Calvin and Hobbes is back, but the mystery is why he disappeared in the first place.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Aid Workers and Their Housekeepers
Sam Sweeney
August 14, 2023
Is the humanitarian industry a jobs program for college-educated Westerners?
Featured in the August 2023 issue
The Gospel Truth
Ian Dowbiggin
August 14, 2023
A new book rethinks the central conflict of the infamous Scopes Trial.
Featured in the August 2023 issue
Britain’s Military Enlightenment
Sumantra Maitra
August 14, 2023
The British did not acquire an empire through martial strength alone.
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