Trump’s industrial masterminds suggest how in two new books.
On its 75th anniversary, its ideas still could unite the factions of the right.
Irving Kristol was a renegade liberal in 1978—and wrong about markets.
In his work, intellectual freedom competes with economic centralization.
The government has divorced affordability and quality, but there’s a plan to unite them again.
Were the family and firm made and unmade by capitalism—or by their own choices?
His nostalgia for the New Deal clashes with the history of feminism in America.
What Crèvecoeur, Du Bois, and Tocqueville teach about war, racism, and the pursuit of happiness.
Founded in 1957 by Russell Kirk and Henry Regnery, Modern Age is a journal of conservative thought and a magazine devoted to culture, history, philosophy, and the ideas behind the great currents of modern life. Follow us on X @ModAgeJournal
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