If we are to have some hope of recovery rather than civil surrender to identity politics, we must rely on tools beyond civil discourse.
Bruce P. Frohnen
Postell and O'Neill have produced a volume that perpetuates the unfortunate “Wall Street vs. Main Street” divide in American conservatism.
Most lawyers today seem to believe that they must make new law because the one they inherited was in fact fundamentally unjust.
Until recently, our common law has always assumed that faith has a place in society.
We need to understand the role religion played in public life - and still does play - to grapple with how the courts should think about the matter.
By stifling religion and the communities that form around it, the courts undermine religion's capacity to house safely our natural drive for meaning.
Bruce Frohnen reviews Heinrich Rommen's warning against legal positivism and reminder of the vital importance of natural law.
Bruce Frohnen is Professor of Law at Ohio Northern University. His most recent book, written with Ted McAllister, is Coming Home: Reclaiming America's Conservative Soul.