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This new and expanded edition significantly updates Arabella’s story, charting its heavy engagement in the 2024 election, its continued ties to foreign funders, and its leadership in opposing the Trump administration.
This book is not a curriculum. It is, however, a list of “those things from mathematics you should have learned but probably didn’t.” The theorems and proofs in this book represent, in a small way, some of the best that has been said within the discipline of mathematics.
His life was soaked in sex, secret agents, suicide, and even a dose of Satanism. Then he became the unlikely idea man for the American Right. This book rewrites the history of the conservative movement through these Lost Papers of the American Right that expose the rivalries, jealousies, friendships, and fights among the makers of the movement.
The Golden Thread, Volume I examines how the foundations were laid for the West’s political and economic dominance in the modern era, illuminating the deep roots of the ideas, arts, and institutions that continue to shape our world.
This book explains how it is not Soviet Marxism, but a Marxism that was shaped by European intellectuals, adapted and refined by America’s student radicals of the 1960s, and diffused throughout the culture that has caused today’s social ills.
For much of American history, an impassable gulf seemed to separate Jews and Christians, keeping their respective peoples and cultures far apart. But in recent decades that has begun to change. Suitable for both classroom use and stand-alone reading, the highly accessible contents of Jewish Roots of American Liberty will inform and inspire those who want to illuminate the bond between the American and Jewish stories and convey the blessings of that bond to a rising generation.
Angelo Codevilla, a towering intellect and prolific scholar, left an indelible mark on the study of political philosophy and statesmanship.
Taking Religion Seriously is Murray’s autobiographical account of the decades-long evolution in his stance toward the idea of God in general and Christianity in particular.
The radical left want you to think that on hot-button issues from education and civics to race and gender, Americans are split down the middle—“polarized.” They want you to think that at least half of your fellow citizens hold views that only yesterday everyone considered crazy. And they want to make you afraid of not being on the “enlightened” side. But it turns out that this polarization is a myth.
Jeff Glassman offers a deep dive into the California Science Framework and a blueprint for K-12 science education that holds significant sway across the U.S. He presents a pointed critique and puts forth an alternate approach to fostering science literacy, aiming to benefit both students and the wider public.
Through carefully selected stories and a clear, engaging writing style, Wilfred McClay invites students, teachers, and history enthusiasts alike to engage with America’s past and our ongoing quest for liberty and justice for all in Land of Hope.
The Golden Thread, Volume II begins in 1500, when the Protestant Reformation brought an end of the Roman Catholic Church’s dominance over European states. It then turns to the rise of imperial powers that swiftly circled the globe, and to the explosion of intellectual, economic, and technological advancements sparked by the Enlightenment. In its closing chapters, The Golden Thread engages with the most significant questions facing the West today.
Based on 30 years of his award-winning teaching of writing, Dr. Gregory Roper shows how you can use the nearly-forgotten ancient technique of Stasis Theory to build better, cleaner, more persuasive prose.
The origin of COVID-19 has sparked relentless debate since 2020. But if we follow the science, the evidence for a lab-based origin is undeniable. This book urges a collective reckoning, highlighting the critical need to rein in gain-of-function experiments that toy with viral lethality or super-charge airborne transmission.
Why Democracy Needs the Rich challenges the prevailing narrative that wealth undermines democracy, offering a bold, thought-provoking case for the essential role of the rich in sustaining and enhancing democratic institutions.