Central to Europe: The Advance of the Visegrád Four
Pre-pandemic economic and social progress looked very good for Czechia, Hungary, Poland, and Slovakia, and troubling for Germany and France. If these trends resume and there is no reason to think they won’t the East will soon outshine the West.
AS EUROPE emerges from the depths of quarantine and recession, its geopolitical landscape will reveal a significant change, the result of trends that emerged before 2020. Since these trends disturb a status quo that sustains illusory feelings of confidence and superiority among elites in Western Europe, it can only slowly, and barely, be acknowledged.
Failure of a Fascist - Washington Free Beacon freebeacon.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from freebeacon.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
David George Moore
It’s been my privilege to be in the personal spaces of several writers. Among others, Pulitzer winner Tony Horwitz warmly welcomed me at his home on Martha’s Vineyard as did William F. Buckley at his place on Long Island Sound.
I have interviewed over 200 authors. Everyone has their own style with reading, capturing what they have read, research, and then writing. In my own writing I have settled on an approach that certainly has its idiosyncrasies.
Wilfred McClay is Blankenship Chair in the History of Liberty at The University of Oklahoma. He is author of the best-selling and highly regarded survey of United States History,
Matthew Continetti: The Era of Limbaugh — The Patriot Post patriotpost.us - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from patriotpost.us Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Rush Limbaugh speaks at the 2019 Student Action Summit in West Palm Beach, Fla., December 21, 2019.
(Gage Skidmore) Which is the real Rush Limbaugh the merry prankster of Cape Girardeau, Missouri, or the unifying voice of conservatives across the country? Just tune in . . .
Editor’s Note: The following cover story on Rush Limbaugh, who died Wednesday, ran in the September 6, 1993, issue of National Review
. It is reprinted here in honor of his life, his legacy, and his contribution to conservatism.
To begin with, he’s not Mr. Limbaugh. You’ve got to call the ornament of the EIB (Excellence in Broadcasting) network, the man so used to the adulation of his fans that he long ago asked them to skip the praise with which they prefaced every phone call and just say “Ditto,” the man who likes to claim he has “talent on loan from God,” just plain Rush. That’s what the ever-courtly Ronald Reagan, who has never met him, calls him. A month aft