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6/6/2022

Last week’s curation at RealClear’s American Civics portal begins with an op-ed by Joseph M. Knippenberg, a professor of politics at Oglethorpe University and a Jack Miller Center faculty partner. He makes the case that a good civic education depends on receiving a liberal education that transcends particular experiences. “Our circumstances demand that we be able to communicate – and hence share understandings – with one another,” Knippenberg writes. Pointing to W.E.B. DuBois’s “The Souls of Black Folk,” Knippenberg argues that “we start where students are to bring them into full universal humanity.” He continues: “We honor and treasure the stories of our ancestors because they are ours. They’re both particular to us and part of the variegated human panoply. But that panoply is human, with its particular embodiments pointing to a nature that we share.”

At First Things, Vincent Phillip Muñoz argues that the Supreme Court’s Establishment Clause jurisprudence is woefully out of step with the First Amendment. Twentieth century Court precedent in this area “effectively demand government hostility toward religion.” Muñoz says that in order to reach a better understanding of the Establishment Clause, the Court must recover the original meaning of the constitutional phrase “establishment of religion.” Analyzing the South Carolina Constitution of 1778, he posits that the Establishment Clause in fact “was designed to prevent the government from exercising the powers of a church and from delegating its legitimate power to churches.”

Olivia B. Waxman at TIME interviews the historian David Hackett Fischer about his latest book, “African Founders,” which is an examination of the experiences of slaves living in the United States from the 17th century to the 19th century. As Fischer explains, the book’s “central idea is the importance of what Africans did to help found this free Republic and how they made it more free than it otherwise would have been.” In fact, he says that their fight for liberty should be an example for Americans today: “We are all in their debt. And they have also given us the obligation of making it yet more free.” Regarding the 1619 Project, he also argues that it’s “centered too much on what went wrong and too little on the creativity of people who are responding to what went wrong.”

Original Posts

Liberal Education in an Intersectional Age

Joseph M. Knippenberg, RealClearAmericanCivics

In the News

The Mayflower Compact and the City of God on Earth

Joerg Knipprath, Constituting America

Army Renaming Bases That Honor Confederate Generals

Jeff South, Conversation

Politics as the Leisure of the Theory Class

Michael Barone, RealClearPolitics

Historic Ohio Freed Slave Cemetery May Get Renovation

Nancy Bowman, Dayton Daily News

Report Suggests New Avenues for K-12 Civics Assessment

Jon Edelman, Diverse Issues

Five Facts on Inflation and the Federal Reserve

No Labels, RealClearPolicy

Why America Does Not Have a King

Adam Carrington, Constituting America

The Black Thinkers Who Shaped the US

Olivia B. Waxman, TIME

Watergate Fifty Years Later

Andrew C. McCarthy, Law & Liberty

Democrats, Republicans Trying to Return Civility to Congress

Ledyard King, USA Today

Why We Keep Talking Past Each Other on Guns

Jonathan Zimmerman, New York Daily News

Colleges Are Being Degraded Into Tools of Narrow Indoctrination

Adam Carrington, Chicago Tribune

Top Gun: Maverick's Nostalgia for American Greatness

Elle Reynolds, The Federalist

Supreme Court to Rule on Wider Right to Carry Guns

Mark Walsh, Education Week

Individual Rights Under the California Constitution

Chris Micheli, California Globe

Multimedia

Civics Education Reform in the States

Mary Byrne, Katherine Kersten, Anna Miller, & David Randall, NAS

The charge for civics education reform is being led in campaigns throughout the states. Each state provides a different political...

2022 Bradley Prize Remarks

Wilfred McClay, Bradley Foundation

An eminent historian and a professor of history at Hillsdale College, Wilfred McClay gives his remarks upon being awarded with...

The Fight for Free Speech at Princeton and Beyond

Robert George, James Madison Program

The freedom of academics and students to think and speak freely, on and off campus, has empowered the pursuit of truth and...

Honoring America's Fallen

Ashbrook

"American citizenship is a high estate. He who holds it is the peer of kings. It has been secured only by untold toil and effort. It will...

Carl Cannon's Great American Stories

Great American Stories: Casey at the Bat

It's Friday, June 3, 2022, the day of the week when I pass along a quotation intended to be uplifting ...

Great American Stories: Dolley Madison

It's Friday, May 20, 2022, the day of the week when I pass along a quotation intended to be uplifting ...

Great American Stories: Willie Mays's Gift

Good morning, it's Friday, May 6, 2022, the day of the week when I pass along a quotation intended to ...

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