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Not Quite Narnia: The Harry Potter books in review
JASON BOFFETTI
With five million copies in hardcover and three million in paperback, the Harry Potter series is a dramatic success. But not everyone is wild about Harry.

How football became a symbol of American decadence
FATHER RAYMOND J. DE SOUZA
The NFL knows something about rigging the system.

"What It Means To Be Human": A Review
MICHAEL PAKALUK
"The purpose of law is to protect and promote the flourishing of persons."

A Baker’s First Amendment Rights
ROBERT P. GEORGE AND SHERIF GIRGIS
You need the First Amendment precisely when your ideas offend others or flout the majority's orthodoxies. 

Cultural Appropriation
RANDALL SMITH
I've been trying to understand "cultural appropriation."

Kids Need Their Parents: Memoir Provides a Welcome Relief
JENNIFER ROBACK MORSE
The elites of our society have concocted an elaborate belief system to justify themselves as they sacrifice the needs of children to the desires of adults.

The Primal Scream of Identity Politics
MARY EBERSTADT
Why have so many people found in identity politics the very center of their political being?

After 7 billion
MICHAEL COOK
The most serious problem a world of seven billion people faces is not too many people, but too high a proportion of old people. This the real story behind the seven billion.

The Vanishing Body and the Disappearing Cemetery
JOHN M. GRONDELSKI
The cemetery is the resting place, ahead of the Resurrection of the Dead, of the body.

Fighting for The Right to Be Wrong
KEVIN SEAMUS HASSON
Kevin Seamus Hasson is founder and chairman of the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty, a law firm specializing in religious freedom and the author of the recently released The Right to Be Wrong: Ending the Culture War Over Religion in America. Hasson recently talked to NRO about the book and Becket's work

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