Conservatism

Grand New Party

By Marc Comtois | August 3, 2008 |

Fred Siegel reviewed Grand New Party: How Republicans Can Win the Working Class and Save the American Dream, by Ross Douthat and Reihan Salam in a recent issue of National Review. Here’s the basic thesis, according to Siegel: The timely thesis of Grand New Party is that the party that captures “the non-college-educated voters who…

RIP, Tony Snow

By Donald B. Hawthorne | July 12, 2008 |

Tony Snow died today, at age 53, of cancer. We remember his family in our prayers as we pay tribute to the memory of a wonderful man. Some tributes: Cal Thomas Byron York Shannen Coffin Kathryn Jean Lopez Michelle Malkin Fox News Several selections from Snow’s writings about Reagan, Parting Thoughts on the Ultimate Sacrifice,…

International Conservatives Continue Winning Streak

By Marc Comtois | May 2, 2008 |

While many pundits still expect the U.S. to make a leftward move in November, it’s interesting to note that political ground continues to be gained by the right in some important Western European countries. The latest example being the local elections in Great Britain: Winning the London mayoral contest is expected to cap an historic…

A Further Thought

By Justin Katz | March 29, 2008 |

But let’s not lose sight of a principle that looms pretty large in conservative philosophy: that social pressure is often the appropriate means of guiding individuals toward behavior that is healthy for society. This concept puts conservatives at the obvious political disadvantage of giving liberals cover to declare that they judge nothing but judgement and…

Reflections by Bill Buckley and Pope Benedict XVI on our Judeo-Christian/Western Civilization tradition: “…how deep we fall…there is always hope…the one who has hope lives differently…”

By Donald B. Hawthorne | March 19, 2008 |

William Kristol writes: …Bill was a complicated man. In him, admirable but disparate qualities coexisted easily. Bill was at once remarkably ecumenical — and knowledgeably discriminating. He had a taste for profound reflection about man and God — and for fierce polemicizing against socialists and appeasers. He had a real joie de vivre — but…

William F. Buckley, Jr.

By Donald B. Hawthorne | February 27, 2008 |

John Podhoretz offered these words about WFB: He was the model of the modern American intellectual. He published a small magazine of ideas whose influence and centrality to the country in which he lived vastly outdistanced publications with 100 times its readership. He wrote a newspaper column for a half-century, twice or three times a…

R.I.P. William F. Buckley Jr.

By Marc Comtois | February 27, 2008 |

William F. Buckley, Jr., part of the bedrock foundation–some would say the cornerstone–of the modern American conservative movement died this morning. From the National Review’s Kathryn Jean Lopez: I’m devastated to report that our dear friend, mentor, leader, and founder William F. Buckley Jr., died this morning in his study in Stamford, Connecticut. He died…

Summarizing a Conservative World View

By Donald B. Hawthorne | January 21, 2008 |

Mona Charen describes John Hood’s definition as “the best one paragraph summation of what it means to be a conservative I’ve seen in a long, long time.” The conservative movement constitutes an alliance of those who accept unchangeable facts rather than trying to wish fantasy into reality, remake human nature, or avoid economic tradeoffs. Traditionalists…

How I Came to Believe in God, and Why I Shouldn’t Try to Be Steve Laffey

By Justin Katz | December 1, 2007 |

To a completely unrelated post, Theracapulas (who has commented under a variety of names over the past six months) explains the problem with Anchor Rising and the RIGOP: As to why someone like you would say that you agree with a socialist like that URI professor is flat out perplexing. Dan Yorke didn’t say that…

Sometimes, We Just Have to Agree to Agree

By Carroll Andrew Morse | November 27, 2007 |

In the comments section of a recent post mentioning his book Rescuing Providence, after thanking Anchor Rising for the plug, Providence firefighter Michael Morse wrote…I can’t say I agree with a lot of your views, but they are always interesting and thought provoking.However, upon reading sections from his most recent Projo op-ed, like this one…Our…