From Claremont Institute <[email protected]>
Subject Preview the new issue of the Claremont Review of Books
Date February 19, 2021 6:55 PM
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Subscribe to the Claremont Review of Books today! The new Winter 2020/21 issue of the Claremont Review of Books is now online. Although most content is reserved for our subscribers, we've unlocked a few essays and book reviews for all to enjoy! You can find a sampling of those free articles below, and we invite you to peruse the full table of contents of the new issue here. We hope you enjoy this preview of America's most thoughtful political journal and that our writers help to illuminate for you the fundamental questions at play in today's political and cultural climate. Interested in becoming a subscriber? For only $19.95, new subscribers will receive immediate digital access to all past issues, including the Winter 2020/21 issue, and will then receive four print editions, beginning with our Spring 2021 issue. Become a subscriber! After January 6th The future of Trump and Trumpism. By: Charles R. Kesler Donald Trump’s supporters probably thought it couldn’t get any worse than Election Day, or more precisely the hours and days afterward when the votes swung shockingly in Joe Biden’s favor—the day the winning stopped. Then came January 6, and the attack on the Capitol. Read More You're Fired! Understanding Trump's Defeat By: William Voegeli Baseball hall-of-famer Vernon “Lefty” Gomez often said, “I’d rather be lucky than good.” The Occam’s Razor interpretation of the 2020 presidential election is that President Donald Trump was neither lucky nor good enough a politician to secure a second term. His bad luck, in particular, was compounded. Read More The Continuing Crisis The election and its aftermath. By: Michael Anton Five people died in the chaos on Capitol Hill on January 6. An unarmed 14-year veteran of the Air Force, Ashli Babbitt, was shot point-blank by a Capitol Police officer. Four others, one of them another Capitol Police officer, apparently died of medical emergencies. All of these deaths were tragic and unnecessary. Read More Do-Gooder in Chief Eleanor Roosevelt's career was a vindication of every misogynist cliché about women in politics. By: Helen Andrews In 1996 Bob Woodward embarrassed First Lady Hillary Clinton by revealing that she had attempted to commune with the ghost of Eleanor Roosevelt during a session with a spiritualist in the White House solarium. Mrs. Clinton explained that her “conversation” with Mrs. Roosevelt served no occult purposes but was merely a psychological exercise to put herself in the mind of the only presidential wife in history more hated than Clinton herself. Read More The Electoral College by Dawn’s Early Light The Electoral College is both a steward and a guardian of our democracy. By: Christopher DeMuth Consider this stirring account of democratic progress: At the Constitutional Convention of 1787, a proposal to elect the president of the United States by national popular vote—though initially favored by James Madison, James Wilson, and Gouverneur Morris—fell flat with most of the delegates. Instead, they adopted a complex, hasty, last-minute compromise no one was enthusiastic about: presidential election by state electors. This system came to be called the Electoral College. Read More Reason to Believe Observant Jewish communities offer an example of continuity and adaptiveness found in few other Western communities. By: David P. Goldman Britain’s late Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks once asked historian Paul Johnson, author of an excellent History of the Jews (1987), what most impressed him about Judaism. Johnson replied that Judaism, being a religion of strong individuals and strong communities, presents a rare balance between the individual and the collective. Read More Explore the full issue here! About___Magazine___Fellowships___CCJ___Events___Donate The mission of the Claremont Institute is to restore the principles of the American Founding to their rightful, preeminent authority in our national life. ‌ ‌ ‌ The Claremont Institute | 1317 W Foothill Blvd #120, Upland, CA 91786 Unsubscribe [email protected] Update Profile | Customer Contact Data Notice Sent by [email protected] powered by Try email marketing for free today!
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