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  • Why the Best Gift for Your Child Is a Brother or Sister

    Why the Best Gift for Your Child Is a Brother or Sister2

    Original thinkers are hard to come by. If you doubt that, visit a diploma mill. You’ll see right off that credentials don’t confer character, creativity or common sense. Academic hubris conflates knowledge with wisdom. Such folks are a dime a dozen. Sui generis Then there is Colin Brazier: sui generis, in a class by himself. Original

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  • When Inequality Is Fatal for Men

    When Inequality Is Fatal for Men0

    Equality has always been an American preoccupation, right from the words “all men are created equal” in the Declaration of Independence. Yet even that phrase is not egalitarian enough by today’s lights; feminists have long objected to the gendered language of “all men.” Thomas Jefferson didn’t mean to commit a microaggression; in 1776, “all men”

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  • A Case for Ancient Books: Recovering True Happiness

    A Case for Ancient Books: Recovering True Happiness1

    Something important is missing from contemporary fiction and non-fiction. Specifically, I think the majority of books today lack a sense of universality—ideas and perspectives that extend beyond the bounds of the society and culture in which they were written. Certainly, it is essential to read works that reflect our own society and culture, but isn’t

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  • How Can We Stop Serving Students So Poorly?

    How Can We Stop Serving Students So Poorly?1

    In 1942, there were 108,579 public school districts in the United States. By the 2020-21 school year, there were only 13,187. That massive consolidation of school districts was propelled by the belief that economies of scale created by larger school districts would lower costs and serve students better. Those presumed efficiencies have not, however, been demonstrated in practice.

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  • The Cult of Safety Explodes

    The Cult of Safety Explodes2

    It was the 1970s. Dry cleaning bags lurked quietly behind couches waiting patiently for the opportunity to pounce on the hapless child who dropped a Lego nearby. Unguarded five-gallon buckets stood brazenly in the middle of basement floors hoping to entice their next drowning victim. Discarded refrigerators prowled the land looking for unsuspecting eight-year-olds to

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  • A Call to Battle: Liz Wheeler’s ‘Hide Your Children’

    A Call to Battle: Liz Wheeler’s ‘Hide Your Children’1

    When my wife and I were raising and homeschooling our four children, we faced certain cultural dilemmas just like other parents we knew. Should we let our kids read the Harry Potter books? (Affirmative on that one.) What movies or television shows should we allow them to watch? What sort of friends were they making?

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