The GOP’s ‘Great American Story’ will play well at the ballot box
The Republicans kicked things off in a spirit of affirmation and hope
Roger Kimball is a US columnist for The Spectator, the publisher of Encounter Books and the editor and publisher of the New Criterion.
The Republicans kicked things off in a spirit of affirmation and hope
Organizing a virtual event is a challenge, not to say an exercise in surrealistic self-expression
Not so fast
The former VP oscillates between alarming porousness and inexplicable hostility
Lynch, Lulu and the love of Bandol
His would-be inquisitors in the Democratic party have succumbed to a virus far more toxic than the Wuhan flu
The media says one thing while also saying the opposite
A crack in The Narrative? A glimmer of sanity? Maybe. Well, not really
More and more people are awakening to the minatory reality that is China
The rule of law has been having a hard time of it lately
Pinot Noir ‘should be approached like a beautiful woman — with respect, some knowledge, and great hopes’
George Floyd was a pretext, not a cause. The cause was destruction of our civilization
Who is immune from retrospective condemnation?
At least one institution is standing firm against the mob of kneelers and capitulators and sentimentalizers
The late artist and his wife spent years assiduously burnishing his image
What bubbles up must go down
Thanks to tenured radicals, we are witnessing the retribalization of the world
From our UK edition
‘Never deny, seldom affirm, always distinguish.’ We should dust off that old Jesuit adage in this season of American rioting. It may not be quite as mellifluous as ‘persistent perversity provokes the patient pedagogue to produce particularly painful punishment’, but it does suit the case. The death in Minneapolis of George Floyd at the hands
She’s a patient but no-nonsense camp counselor in charge of the problem kids
A ‘single and proper standard of justice’ has not been scrupulously, or even half-heartedly, applied to the Trump-Russia story