A Restorationist Critique of Substantive Due Process
Substantive due process is the most dramatic example of what the Restorationist framework calls interpretive drift: the quiet migration of judicial power from adjudicating law to manufacturing it. The 14th Amendment’s Due Process Clause was drafted as a…
Read MoreThe Architecture of Individual Liberty: Why a Republic Demands Self-Restraint
The American experiment was built on a radical premise: the smallest and most vital minority is the individual. True liberty is not just the absence of government; it is a system of colorblind governance where citizens are judged by merit, protected by…
Read MoreThe Architecture of Self-Government: How Modern Education Fails the Framers’ Intent
The American experiment in republican self-governance was never designed to run on structural mechanics alone. It was designed to run on character. The Framers of the United States Constitution understood that a government by the people requires an…
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