Christian integralism bears a resemblance to early twentieth-century Christian progressivism that sought to use the state for non-Christian ends.
Bradley C. S. Watson
In our age of self-righteous secularism, original sin has gone out of fashion, but social sin and political salvation are de rigueur.
The academics made hostility to the Founders' Constitution a domesticated notion.
Progressivism is at war with human nature, and that war comes to sight most clearly in American history.
Michael Rappaport offers up some interesting, lawyerly suggestions as to how to stop what he claims is the Constitution’s incessant drift toward centralization and nationalism. His suggestions center on revising the constitutional amendment process so that it might be more accommodating to state interests.
Bradley C. S. Watson teaches at the Van Andel Graduate School of Government at Hillsdale College in Washington, D.C. Among his books is Progressivism: The Strange History of a Radical Idea (University of Notre Dame, 2020).