J.D. Vance Has Changed a Lot Since the Days of Hillbilly Elegy
Untangling the roots of Vance's odd political evolution.
Untangling the roots of Vance's odd political evolution.
The Venezuelan experience shows that democracy cannot cure the evils of socialism, and that a democratic socialist system is unlikely to remain democratic for long.
The Ohio Senator is one of the Party's leading advocates of protectionism, economic planning, and immigration restrictions.
A collection of links to some of my previous writings on these topics, which remain relevant today.
Both ideologies are bad. But one is a much greater danger than the other.
In a speech given in February, the late great libertarian intellectual leader made important points about the past, present, and future of liberty.
Today is the 45th anniversary of the Somin family's arrival in America.
Vivek Ramaswamy isn't the first to advocate this badly wrong idea. But there's still no good justification for it.
The Turkish opposition ran circles around President Recep Tayyib Erdogan's party in local elections. It could be the beginning of the end of his 20-year reign.
Economic nationalists are claiming the deal endangers "national security" to convince Americans that a good deal for investors, employees, and the U.S. economy will somehow make America less secure. That's nonsense.
In the presentation I explain why Putin's regime appeals to these people, and how they compare with Western sympathizers with the USSR during the Cold War.
One is an interview for the new Argue with Me podcast series, and the other is part of Michael Liebowitz's Rational Egoist series.
His speech in Davos challenged the growing worldwide trend of increased government involvement in economic affairs.
The Cato Institute has posted a Spanish-language version of the article I coauthored with Alex Nowrasteh.
Coauthored with Cato Institute scholar Alex Nowrasteh.
After firing the staffer blamed for a video that borrowed Nazi imagery, is Ron DeSantis finally backing away from the authoritarian edgelords?
It has many good points. But I have some reservations and questions.
Rejection of the state and the use of lethal force can be found in the founding documents of Christianity.
Plus: A listener asks if the Roundtable has given the arguments of those opposed to low-skilled immigration a fair hearing.
Hawley might call them "tariffs on China," but that's obvious nonsense: Tariffs are paid by Americans.
The Case for Christian Nationalism advocates for an ethnically uniform nation ruled by a "Christian prince."
The war is often described as a conflict between authoritarianism and liberal democracy. That reality has some underappreciated implications.
Alex Nowrasteh of the Cato Institute provides what may be the best short summary of the evils of nationalism.
National Review's Rich Lowry debates the Cato Institute's Alex Nowrasteh.
Should Americans support nationalism? National Review's Rich Lowry debates the Cato Institute's Alex Nowrasteh.
And their team wanted nothing to do with politics.
Despite Tyler Cowen's argument for the elite theory, the real divisions have much more to do with the New Right's nationalism.
Big-government conservatives underperformed across the country.
An interview between President Joe Biden and social media star Dylan Mulvaney offer a lesson in mutual forbearance.
Washington Post columnist Keith Richburg explains how foot voting patterns are a strong indicator of the relative appeal of governments.
Vladimir Putin's annexation plan is indefensible on both legal and moral grounds. Some of the reasons why have broader implications for normative theories of secession and self-determination.
By going from purging anyone who does not pledge allegiance to the nationalist agenda to welcoming all comers, natcons have abandoned the original defining characteristic of their movement.
It's far too easy to find glowing descriptions of Putin on the nationalist right. Even some libertarians are making excuses for Russia's invasion. They should stop.
The Cardiff Philharmonic Orchestra scrubbed the famed composer from an upcoming program, calling his music "inappropriate at this time."
Hungary's Viktor Orbán becomes the latest Kremlin crony to break ranks.
Hungary's brand of nationalism generates not just cronyist domestic policy but tawdry foreign policy as well.
The "good old days" weren't all that good—but they're still messing with politics.
As exciting as it may sound to grab power and vanquish enemies, the only way to save America is to recommit to its original principles.
Authoritarians see masculinity as so fragile that it needs to be reinforced by the state.
The two are idolizing the wrong models.
It isn't an embarrassment. It isn't heroism. It just is.
Americans are divided not because politicians failed to pronounce the correct phrases, but because we genuinely disagree on questions of public policy, justice, and identity.
We should prefer drag queens in libraries over despots in the government.
Their letter to Congress warns about inevitable abuses against religious and racial minorities.
It is often argued that we need to restrict immigration in order to protect democratic institutions. But ethno-nationalist immigration restrictionists are a much bigger threat to those institutions than immigrants.
The organization has devolved from skepticism toward government to veneration of politicians.
The scientific and medical knowledge used to develop and distribute the vaccines is not, thankfully, trapped within national borders.
The members of Steve Bannon's international circle share an outlandish spiritual-historic vision, but their threat to liberty is more mundane.