The Long Memory of Civilization and the Short Memory of Republics
Civilization is a recent invention. Anatomically modern humans walked the earth for nearly 300,000 years before a single word was written, before a single law was carved into stone, before a single institution existed to transmit knowledge across…
Read MoreRestorationist Essay: Cause, Effect, and the Avalanche of Truth
The viral post circulating about Minnesota is a case study in how quickly exaggeration can eclipse truth when fear takes the wheel. Its language is thick with imagery—kidnappings, brutality, indiscriminate violence—yet thin on verifiable structure. It…
Read MoreThe Constitutional Duty to Enforce Federal Law: Why Congress Cannot Use Funding to Nullify Immigration Statutes
A nation cannot survive if its laws exist only on paper. The Constitution establishes a simple, load‑bearing sequence: Congress writes the laws, the Executive enforces them, and the courts interpret them. This separation of powers is not decorative. It…
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