Today at The Weekly Standard, my review of John A. Farrell’s Richard Nixon: The Life.
history
Is It History Yet?
StandardToday at The Federalist, I reviewed a new Bill Clinton biography and explored the larger question of when journalism stops and history begins.
Electoral Error
StandardToday at The Federalist, I wrote that respect for the Founding Fathers doesn’t mean you have to love everything they did, including the Electoral College. Check it out.
Let Him Serve
StandardToday at The Federalist, I wrote about James Mattis and the restrictions on former officers serving as Secretary of Defense.
From Union to Nation
StandardI reviewed Steven Hahn’s new book, A Nation Without Borders, for The Weekly Standard.
Poor Stanbery
StandardToday at The Federalist, I wrote about the last time Congress refused to confirm any of a President’s Supreme Court appointees, and why they could do it again.
Sam Grant
Standard
Suspending the Laws
StandardI wrote this article for The Federalist about why calls for Governor Kasich to suspend the right to openly carry guns during the RNC were misguided and undemocratic.
Commonsense Press Regluation
StandardI tried my hand at satire in The Federalist today. Judging by the comments, not everybody gets the joke.
Tubman Triumphant
StandardYesterday, the Treasury Department announced that, among other changes, Harriet Tubman will replace Andrew Jackson on the twenty dollar bill.
I support this. Tubman was a great figure in American history who worked to advance the cause of human liberty. I’ve been pleased to see that many people I respect on the Right have also praised the change. And, you know, we used to change the people on bills all the time. Hamilton was on it once, as was a more obscure Treasury Secretary, Daniel Manning. So, yes, let’s shake things up.
Even though I’ve never been especially a Jackson fan, I feel like he’s getting slammed a little too much these days. I mean, he was a proponent of slavery and Indian removal, so those are major strikes against him, but he was also the first president to suggest that poor and landless people (if they were white and male) deserved an equal say in this country’s governance as the rich and landed. Jackson and his followers expanded full participation in the republic to a lot of people in a fairly short time, and in a way no other nation was really doing.
That didn’t amount to much if you were one of his slaves or one of the Indians he forced to walk a thousand miles away from their homes (and possibly die on the way,) but it meant something positive to a great many people, the sort of folk who had no voice in any other country at the time. His monetary policy was kind of bizarre, but he did whip the redcoats at New Orleans, so that’s something.
So, let’s be glad to see him go, but not Vox-ify the nuanced character that founded the Democratic Party and did some good along with all the bad.