How Does Federalism Hold Up Today? (Michael McConnell, Defining Ideas)

The founders’ durable compromise is still full of insight about political and human motives. Editor’s note: This is an excerpt from a new book, American Federalism Today: Perspectives on Political and Economic Governance, edited by Michael J. Boskin and available from the Hoover Institution Press. Delegates to the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia in the summer of 1787 eventually emerged …

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Our Own Worst Enemies: The Violent Style in American Politics (Robert A. Pape, Foreign Affairs)

In under a decade, violence has become a shockingly regular feature of American political life. In 2017, a left-wing extremist shot and nearly killed Republican House Majority Leader Steve Scalise and four other people. In 2021, a mass of right-wing insurrectionists stormed the U.S. Capitol to try to stop the Democratic president-elect, Joe Biden, from …

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Israel and Hezbollah Are Escalating Toward Catastrophe: How to Avert a Larger War That Neither Side Should Want (Dana Stroul, Foreign Affairs)

Within 24 hours of Hamas’s October 7 terror attack, Hezbollah followed with an attack of its own, launching projectiles from Lebanon into northern Israel. Hassan Nasrallah, Hezbollah’s leader, explained that the campaign was intended to strain Israel’s resources and force the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), then preparing its response to Hamas in Gaza, to fight …

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Islamism and Immigration in Germany and the European Context (Russell A. Berman)

Large scale immigration has led to important changes in political discourse across much of Europe. The lack of successful integration policies has put pressure on government services, thereby weakening social cohesion and, unsurprisingly, producing a vocal and sometimes violent backlash. Large scale immigration has led to important changes in political discourse across much of Europe. …

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City Journal Delves Into the Crisis of Liberal Education (Peter Berkowitz)

Like all rights-protecting democracies – and especially as a 21st-century great power with globe-spanning interests – the United States requires a host of highly-trained individuals to keep its government functioning, military operating, economy churning, and civil society thriving. Essential men and women perform manual labor, offer basic services, and run small businesses. In addition, the …

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The Crumbling Nuclear Order: How to Save the Norms Against Testing, Building, and Using the Ultimate Weapon (Doreen Horschig and Healther Williams, Foreign Affairs)

The risk of nuclear war is the highest it has been since the end of the Cold War. The cause lies primarily with Russia’s ongoing nuclear threats and drills amid the conflict in Ukraine, but not with Russia alone. Tensions in the Middle East may spur Iran to speed up its suspected pursuit of a …

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