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William Kristol will deliver the March 2011 Bradley Lecture at AEI.
Edmund Burke is identified today as a conservative thinker--indeed, one of the greatest conservative thinkers--by his admirers. But his conservatism was more complicated and provocative than even conservatives appreciate. His Reflections on the Revolution in France, a searing indictment of the Revolution, brilliantly forecast the Reign of Terror that was...
The essays in "The Neoconservative Persuasion" are a remarkable introduction to one of the few people who actually liked being called a neoconservative.
While his Climate Fix sounds like yet another exercise in magical thinking, Pielke unloads one heresy after another.
David Cannadine of the University of London and National Portrait Gallery (London) will deliver the October Bradley Lecture.
Having learned the values of self-sufficiency and accumulation of wealth in nineteenth-century Pittsburgh, Andrew Mellon rose to become one of America’s greatest financiers. Despite painful...
A review of Gertrude Himmelfarb's book The Moral Imagination: From Edmund Burke to Lionel Trilling.
A new book diligently linksthe downfall of American liberalism to the assassination of former president John F. Kennedy.
Liberal confidence and its companion disdain for conservative thinking comes in the form of four major narratives about who conservatives are and how they think and function.



