"To be conservative is to prefer the familiar to the unknown, to prefer the tried to the untried, fact to the mistery, the actual to the possible, the limited to the unbounden, the near to the distant, the sufficient to the superabundant, the convenient to the perfect, present laughter to utopian bliss."
Michael Oakeshott

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Otras Publicaciones

  • Christian Science Monitor website Christian Science Monitor

    The Christian Science Monitor is an international daily newspaper published Monday through Friday. Founded in 1908 by Mary Baker Eddy, it's now also a multimedia website, an e-mail edition, a personal digital assistant (PDA) edition, and a downloadable PDF of the print version.

  • Chronicles website Chronicles

    A magazine of American Culture.

  • City Journal website City Journal

    A quarterly magazine of urban affairs, published by the Manhattan Institute, edited by Myron Magnet.

  • Commentary website Commentary

    Commentary is published monthly (except for a combined July-August issue) by the American Jewish Committee.

  • Conservative Forum website Conservative Forum

    The Canadian Conservative Forum (conservativeforum.org) exists to encourage the development and dissemination of ideas concerning the principles and traditions of a free and ordered society. conservativeforum.org is not affiliated with any political party or religious group. It is the creation of a disparate collection of academics, journalists, authors, and activists whose views range from conservatism to libertarianism.

  • Crisis (Magazine on Politics, Culture and the Church)

    The mission of CRISIS Magazine is to interpret and shape the direction of contemporary culture from a standpoint of Catholic tradition. We are dedicated to the proposition that the crisis of modernity can be answered by a Christian humanism rooted in the teachings of the Catholic Church. We bring the wisdom of the Catholic tradition into direct dialogue with contemporary politics and culture.

  • Education Next

    In the stormy seas of school reform, this journal will steer a steady course, presenting the facts as best they can be determined, giving voice (without fear or favor) to worthy research, sound ideas, and responsible arguments. Bold change is needed in American K–12 education, but Education Next partakes of no program, campaign, or ideology. It goes where the evidence points.

  • First Things (Monthly Magazine on Religion, Culture, and Public Life)

    FIRST THINGS is published by The Institute on Religion and Public Life, an interreligious, nonpartisan research and education institute whose purpose is to advance a religiously informed public philosophy for the ordering of society.

  • Foreign Affairs website Foreign Affairs

    Founded in 1921, the Council on Foreign Relations is a non-profit and nonpartisan membership organization dedicated to improving the understanding of U.S. foreign policy and international affairs through the free exchange of ideas. Its 3,400 members include nearly all past and present Presidents, Secretaries of State, Defense and Treasury, other senior U.S. government officials, renowned scholars, and major leaders of business, media, human rights, and other non-governmental groups. Each year the Council sponsors several hundred meetings including televised debates and other media events, and publishes Foreign Affairs, the preeminent journal in the field, as well as dozens of other reports and books by noted experts. Since 1922, the Council has published Foreign Affairs, America's most influential publication on international affairs and foreign policy. It is more than a magazine—it is the international forum of choice for the most important new ideas, analysis, and debate on the most significant issues in the world. Inevitably, articles published in Foreign Affairs shape the political dialogue for months and years to come. With America more engaged in the world than ever, Foreign Affairs is performing an especially valuable service for its readers. And now educators and researchers can also benefit from Foreign Affairs through its Academic Resource Program, helping teach tomorrow's leaders and thinkers.

  • Front Page Mag website Front Page Mag

    Mag from the Center for the Study of Popular Culture.

  • Human Events Online website Human Events Online

    The Declaration of Independence begins: "When in the course of HUMAN EVENTS. . . ." In reporting the news, HUMAN EVENTS is objective; it aims for accurate presentation of all the facts. But it is not impartial. It looks at events through eyes that favor limited constitutional government, local self-government, private enterprise and individual freedom. These are the principles that inspired our Founding Fathers. We think that today the same principles will preserve freedom in America. HUMAN EVENTSHUMAN EVENTS was first published in 1944 - more than a decade before any other conservative weekly. Since then, HUMAN EVENTS has not only defended conservative principles, but helped define them for the rest of the movement. We've also been one of the leaders in exposing liberal media bias - and countering it with tough investigative reporting and sharp conservative commentary. For decades top conservative leaders have relied on HUMAN EVENTS to stay up to date and in the know on the huge political struggles of our day - with fresh, weekly news and commentary from a rock-solid conservative perspective.

  • Intellectual Conservative

    IntellectualConservative.com is part of a growing number of organizations on the right that are using the internet to slowly tear down the left’s reputation as the exclusive haven of intellectual thought. Today the left is dominated by organizations such as MoveOn.org, and led by spokesmen like Michael Moore as its stronghold over academia disintegrates into foolishness. Most university departments are now saturated with feminist studies, queer theory, multicultural studies and other leftist pop ideology masquerading as intellectual theory. Although most conservatives and mainstream academics are probably no longer as envious of being shut out of these types of college faculties, it is unfortunate that university students are almost monolithically subject to leftist spin lessons in order to obtain an education.

  • National Review website National Review

    Like its print parent, National Review magazine, NRO has filled an important role by providing America (and the world) with an alternative source of biting, witty, and well-written news and commentary.

  • Politics and Virtue

    Catholics have an important and essential role in the forming of Public Life. As Catholic we have an obligation to be faithful in our service of Christ and His Church throughout our whole life. As Americans we have a duty to be faithful citizens. PoliticsandVirtue will try to merge these two commitments. Catholic in these United States face many challenges but we must enlighten our culture with the wisdom of the Church. We must not shrink from the calling of engaging in political involvement and the ordering all things to Christ. Our involvement must be based on solid principles & wisdom and it must be lived out. We must "occupy this land with character" as Robert Frost stated. So please join us by signing up for email mailing list. We will endeavor to inform and update you, discuss issues and give you ways to be involved.

  • Reason website Reason

    Reason is the monthly print magazine of “free minds and free markets.” It covers politics, culture, and ideas through a provocative mix of news, analysis, commentary, and reviews. Reason provides a refreshing alternative to right-wing and left-wing opinion magazines by making a principled case for liberty and individual choice in all areas of human activity.

  • TCS Daily

    We at TCS believe strongly in the power of free markets, open societies and individual human ingenuity to raise living standards and improve lives. We celebrate that fact. But we also know that dynamic societies create their own tensions and strains that need to be understood and reconciled. For that reason, we believe the changing nature of our world is the most fruitful area for critical and philosophical inquiry today. We look forward to the active participation of our readers as we explore, argue and debate life in an era marked by upheaval and enrichment.

  • The American Conservative

    Scott McConnell founded The American Conservative with Pat Buchanan and Taki Theodoracopulos in 2002. A Ph.D.in history from Columbia University, he was formerly the editorial page editor of the New York Post and has been a columnist for Antiwar.com and New York Press.His work has been published in Commentary, Fortune, National Review, The New Republic, and many other publications.

  • The American Spectator website The American Spectator
  • The Crux Project website The Crux Project

    Quite simply, it is the lone voice in the wilderness, the avant-garde of the avant-garde, the bane of conventional wisdom, a thorn in the flesh of ideology, a last bastion of Truth, and the home of tough questions and even tougher answers. But that barely scratches the surface...

  • The Human Life Review

    The Human Life Review is the only publication of its kind in the world: a journal devoted to life issues, primarily abortion (William F. Buckley has praised it as "the focus of civilized discussion of the abortion issue"), but also "neonaticide," genetic engineering, cloning, and fetal tissue experimentation, as well as the end-of-life issues of euthanasia, assisted suicide and suicide. We also publish articles dealing with more general questions of family and society: what the "abortion mentality" has done to our culture; how moral relativism has pervaded our political process as well as our educational system; and how the debates over day care and the children's rights movements, as well as the controversy over health-care and end-of-life decision making, reflect a society sharply divided on the most basic moral questions.

  • The Insider

    Publicación conservadora de la fundación Heritage.

  • The New Atlantis website The New Atlantis

    The New Atlantis is an effort to clarify the nation’s moral and political understanding of all areas of technology—from stem cells to hydrogen cells to weapons of mass destruction. We hope to make sense of the larger questions surrounding technology and human nature, and the practical questions of governing and regulating science—especially where the moral stakes are high and the political divides are deep. We also hope to stir things up—to challenge policymakers who know too little about science, and to push scientists who often fail to think seriously or deeply about the ethical and social implications of their work. The magazine has two basic sections: a series of critical essays and in-depth reporting pieces, and an ongoing survey of technology and society that provides brief commentary on the major scientific advances and political debates as they happen. This much seems clear: Technology will be central to the future of American life and American politics. It will create new political divides and new moral quandaries. It will force liberals and conservatives, Republicans and Democrats, to rethink their guiding principles and political vision. The New Atlantis hopes to be at the center of redefining politics for the technological age—by helping scientists, policymakers, and citizens deal more wisely and more creatively with the promise and perils of our nation’s future.

  • The New Criterion website The New Criterion

    The New Criterion, founded in 1982 by the art critic Hilton Kramer and the pianist and music critic Samuel Lipman, is a monthly review of the arts and intellectual life. Written with great verve, clarity, and wit, The New Criterion has emerged as America’s foremost voice of critical dissent in culture and the arts. A staunch defender of the values of high culture, The New Criterion is also an articulate scourge of artistic mediocrity and intellectual mendacity wherever they are found: in the universities, the art galleries, the media, the concert halls, the theater, and elsewhere. Published monthly from September through June, The New Criterion brings together a wide range of young and established critics whose common aim is to bring you the most incisive criticism being written today.

  • The New Pantagruel website The New Pantagruel

    Published by Pantagruel Press, a Missouri non-profit corporation in the process of applying for 501(c)(3) status, The New Pantagruel is an electronic journal run by a cadre of intemperate but friendly Catholics and Protestants who have seen other electronic journals run by Christians, and thought that while they might not be able to do better, they could certainly do no worse. The New Pantagruel does not have a doctrinal statement such as is typical for publications of this sort because its creators haven’t managed to agree on one. They do have an idea of what they’re about though, and if interested, you can read about it in the introduction to The New Pantagruel.

  • The Weekly Standard website The Weekly Standard
  • World Magazine

    We like to report good news but we don't make it sticky-sweet. We also report bad news because Christ's grace becomes most meaningful when we're aware of sin. We want to be tough-minded but warmhearted. We are dependent on God and independent of any political faction or interest group. We don't let advertisers influence news content. We don't print glorified press releases. We like George W. Bush but often criticize his administration. We criticize corruption, even when (sometimes especially when) it erupts among Christians. We avoid sourcery, where unnamed sources spin the news their way.