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Principles Of Government

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(A) Articles are foundational content and (B) Articles are urgently important but may be replaced as they become dated
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    • INTRODUCTION
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  • Principles of Government
    • INTRODUCTION
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Education, Culture, Ideology

  • Categories
    • Education, Culture, Ideology
      • (A) Culture, Character and Ideology
      • (B) Education
      • (B) Culture, Character and Ideology
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  • Ex-Liberal Fred Siegel Saw New York Fall and Rise – Steven Malanga A

    By Steven Malanga - May 9, 2023

    Copyright ©2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Principles of Government · September 21, 2023 ·

    By Steven Malanga – As a New Yorker, Siegel had witnessed the city’s rapid deterioration under … a vast expansion of crime and social disorder. Siegel and other conservative intellectuals at the Manhattan Institute argued that the sharp rise in urban chaos wasn’t inevitable or irreversible…In fact, disorder was a choice. By cutting police and sanitation budgets to boost welfare spending, …The worse things got, the more the city invested in addressing the supposed underlying causes of crime rather than re-establishing order. Siegel … called this “rewarding failure.”…The “riot ideology” that Fred Siegel described in his 1997 book, “The Future Once Happened Here,” played a significant role in the decline of America’s cities in the 1970s and ’80s. Siegel, who died Sunday at 78, wrote that the riot ideology rested on the assumption that “the sins of racism” justified violence and criminality—and that only federal spending could solve those problems. Read More

    Filed Under: (A) Culture, Character and Ideology, (A) Politics, Political Parties, Election Regulations, (A) Social Policy, Transfers and Entitlements, Articles

    DEI at Law Schools Could Bring Down America A

    By Tunku Varadarajan and Ilya Shipiro - March 28, 2023

    Copyright ©2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Principles of Government · September 27, 2023 ·

    By Tunku Varadarajan and Ilya Shipiro – … The threat to ‘dismantle existing structures’ is an idle one in English class. But in legal education it targets individual rights and equal treatment under the Constitution.… If you read critical legal studies, of which critical race theory is a subset, you’ll read about the need to ‘fundamentally dismantle existing structures,’ to ‘change the way social hierarchies operate.’ . . . The goal is to fundamentally change the way that American society operates”…. Read More

    Filed Under: (A) Constitutional Issues, Federalism, Federal Agencies and Administrative Law, (A) Culture, Character and Ideology, (A) Education, Articles

    DEI Spells Death for the Idea of a University AA

    By Matthew Spalding - Feb. 10, 2023

    Copyright ©2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Principles of Government · September 11, 2025 ·

    By Matthew Spalding – Wherever this agenda is allowed to take root, free expression and academic integrity are doomed…The first object of government, Madison tells us,…is the protection of diversity in … different opinions, to be encouraged to preserve liberty. Equity is an ancient legal concept of justice …, developed over centuries of English common-law practice. …. Yet in true Orwellian fashion, they have been redefined.…Diversity is no longer a term to describe the breadth of our differences but a demand to grant privileges to purportedly oppressed identity groups. Equity assigns desirable positions based on race, sex and sexual orientation rather than character, competence and merit.  Read More

    Filed Under: (A) Culture, Character and Ideology, (A) Education, Articles, Education, Culture, Ideology

    New York vs. Florida, by the Numbers B

    By The Editorial Board - Feb. 9, 2023

    Copyright ©2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    Principles of Government · February 11, 2023 ·

    By The Editorial Board – WSJ – Some numbers tell a story about comparative governance. Comparative governance is a useful course of study, not least because bad governance is so costly to people and prosperity. We often write about the migration from the Northeast to Florida and other states, but sometimes the contrast is best illuminated with some data. Read More

    Filed Under: (B) Culture, Character and Ideology, (B) Education, (B) Fiscal Policy, (B) Politics, Political Parties, Election Regulations, (B) Social Policy, Transfers and Entitlements, Articles

    America Needs a New Civil Rights Act A

    By Philip Hamburger - Oct. 16, 2022

    Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

    Principles of Government · August 27, 2023 ·

    By Philip Hamburger – Today’s problem is the suppression of dissent. …Most worrisome is federal and state encouragement for private entities to discriminate against Americans with dissenting views. …The funding justification for regulation increasingly reaches not only subsidized programs but entire institutions. And almost every major institution receives federal funding. So the potential for privatized government discrimination is nearly unlimited. In education, conditions on funding interfere with academic speech and the freedom of private institutions….The first step in a constitutionally more modest approach would be to recognize that government power shouldn’t be exercised in ways that discriminate. On this basis, a new civil-rights act could bar discrimination in the exercise of government power. At the governmental level, this would prohibit viewpoint discrimination by federal and state officials and make their discrimination subject to suits for damages without qualified immunity….The bar against discriminatory exercises of government power would also reach private bodies to the extent they exercise the power of government. Just because government power is privatized doesn’t mean it should escape the ordinary limits on such power. So when institutional review boards, Title IX committees, bar associations or other professional organizations exercise delegated legislative or judicial power, they should be vulnerable to pay damages for their viewpoint discrimination. Read More

    Filed Under: (A) Constitutional Issues, Federalism, Federal Agencies and Administrative Law, (A) Culture, Character and Ideology, (A) Politics, Political Parties, Election Regulations, Articles, Education, Culture, Ideology

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    Primary Sidebar

    Characteristics of Government

    • INTRODUCTION
    • SOCIALISM
    • COMPETITION
    • DEMOCRACY AND VOTING
    • SOCIAL POLICIES EFFECTS ON DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT
    • GOALS OF PROGRESSIVISM AND THE MODERN LEFT
    • EVOLVING IDEOLOGIES
    • DEMOCRACIES AND NATIONAL DEFENSE

    Principles of Government

    • INTRODUCTION
    • CITIZENSHIP
    • BELIEF SYSTEM
    • GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE AND POLITICAL SYSTEM
    • FISCAL POLICIES
    • SOCIAL POLICIES
    • FREE MARKETS AND REGULATION
    • SOUND MONEY
    • THE RULE OF LAW
    • DEFENSE AND FOREIGN POLICY
    • Conservation and Environment

    Voting

    • Introduction

    Resources

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    * All material on this site is for educational purposes only.

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    Characteristics of Government

    • INTRODUCTION
    • SOCIALISM
    • COMPETITION
    • DEMOCRACY AND VOTING
    • SOCIAL POLICIES EFFECTS ON DEMOCRATIC GOVERNMENT
    • GOALS OF PROGRESSIVISM AND THE MODERN LEFT
    • EVOLVING IDEOLOGIES
    • DEMOCRACIES AND NATIONAL DEFENSE

    Principles of Good Government

    • INTRODUCTION
    • CITIZENSHIP
    • BELIEF SYSTEM
    • GOVERNMENT STRUCTURE AND POLITICAL SYSTEM
    • FISCAL POLICIES
    • SOCIAL POLICIES
    • FREE MARKETS AND REGULATION
    • SOUND MONEY
    • THE RULE OF LAW
    • DEFENSE AND FOREIGN POLICY
    • Conservation and Environment

    Resources

    • Featured Articles
    • ARTICLES
    • BOOK REVIEWS
    • Books
    • MAJOR THINK TANKS
    • CIVIC EDUCATION WEB RESOURCES
    • Important Conservative Organizations
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    • Print Resources

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