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September 19, 2023

Why Were All Populists Now

If events continue to take their current course, the world in 2070 will be as different from today as that of 1970 was from 1920
Henry Olsen
The Spectator
Fifteen years ago, populist politicians and parties were seen as a reactionary blip which would soon fade. They are instead not only still present but rapidly gaining strength and power across the developed world.

It’s well past time to wonder if populist sentiments will fade. It’s rather time to consider the heretofore unthinkable: perhaps populism will be to the twenty-first century what labor union-backed social democracy was to the twentieth.

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And in National Review, Henry warns of the dangers of a uniform hike to the retirement age.
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For The Federalist, Nathanael Blake argues that pro-lifers shouldn't trust Trump.
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Last week, Eric Kniffin and Mary Rice Hasson filed an amicus brief in the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in support of parents' right to speak out on the district’s policy of socially transitioning kids without parents’ notice or consent.
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Aaron Kheriaty joined The Reason Livestream to discuss his book, The New Abnormal, and the persistence of COVID mandates for K–12 schools, college campuses, and health care settings.
LISTEN HERE
Rachel Morrison on Proposed EEOC Regulations
Rachel Morrison joined EWTN Pro-Life Weekly to discuss the Pregnant Workers Fairness Act and how proposed EEOC regulations create an abortion mandate for employers across the country.
WATCH HERE
For the Federalist Society, Rachel wrote in detail about how the new EEOC proposed regulations go beyond the law's text to require accommodations for abortion and leave more generous than the FMLA.
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Mary Rice Hasson was quoted by the New York Sun on a new California law that would demand parents "affirm" their children's "gender identity" in custody disputes.
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Thursday, November 30, 2023 and Friday, December 1, 2023
AEI Auditorium, 1789 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20036

Thirty years ago, Robert P. George’s landmark book Making Men Moral challenged the consensus that justice requires governmental neutrality on contested moral questions. How has the book shaped decades of debates about civil liberties and public morality, and why will it remain relevant in the future?

Please join EPPC and its co-sponsors for a conference on Making Men Moral’s enduring influence on public policy.

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