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Theologian, sociologist, and political analyst Fr. Richard John Neuhaus was one of the most relevant actors in U.S. civil life.
Conservatives, being conservatives, have a soft spot for the good old days, but those who pine for the way things were fail to grasp that in the ways that matter, the good old days were not perfect.
This bookexamines the crucial importance of such "mediating structures" as family, church, and neighborhood to a healthy civil society.
The following is a statement of principles for U.S.-North Korean relations, signed by Leith Anderson, William Bennett, Charles Colson, Nicholas Eberstadt, Robert George, Michael Horowitz, Max Kampelman, Penn Kemble, Dianne Knippers, Richard Land, Richard Neuhaus, Michael Novak, Marvin Olasky, Mark Palmer, Nina Shea, Radek Sikorski, and R. James Woolsey:
Questions may be raised in good faith about a presidential candidate's religion in respect to doctrines that bear upon social and political matters and public law.
Fears of a "theocon" ascendance are overstated, but in his new book Damon Linker attempts to stoke the flames of misplaced resentment.
In February 1996, the AEI Press published an expanded version of an earlier publication,with a revised title: To Empower People: From State to Civil Society.
No One Sees God offers believers and unbelievers the opportunity to find common ground by acknowledging the complicated reality of the human struggle with doubt.





