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President Obama’s decision to refuse to defend DOMA is not an act of executive assertion so much as an expression of deep deference to the courts.
A leading Muslim scholar questions whether foundational texts of Islam really do prescribe death for leaving Islam.
A historian looks at how one man sought to serve both truth and love.
Not everything need be seen as ideological.
Is lying ever justified?
The pro-life cause must be advanced by truth and by love, and it must be willing to engage in self-criticism when it fails to meet its own exacting standards.
An appreciation for the naturalness of form can lead us back from the politicization of poetry.
The American sex trade—strip clubs, prostitution, and the booming pornography business—feeds on and fuels modern-day slavery.
On the dualism of degrading desire.
An uncertain legal landscape puts future prosperity at risk.
We are still reckoning with the legacy of Roe’s fraudulent jurisprudence.
Defenders of marriage should draw hope and courage from the pro-life movement’s success.
Speaking out requires humility as well as courage.
A new, supposedly objective book on the abortion debate relentlessly tips the scale against life.
The ancient tradition of pursuing knowledge for its own sake is slowly, quietly making a comeback.
One scientist’s flawed argument for flawless humans.
A reply to NYU Law Professor Kenji Yoshino’s second critique of “What is Marriage?”
A response to FamilyScholars Blogger Barry Deutsch.
A response to Northwestern Law Professor Andrew Koppelman.
Though Christmas is a religious holiday, secularists should appreciate its great contribution to Western Civilization: the lesson that all men are equal in their fundamental human dignity.
A response to NYU Law Professor Kenji Yoshino.
A book on the polyamorous community by a “participant observer” provides a window into a weird, confused, and growing world.
It is at our own peril that we ignore the nexus between moral convictions, the institutions in which they are realized, and our economic culture.
One man’s biography becomes the story of jurisprudence when constitutional interpretation is governed by personality and politics.