by Greg Stuessel | Oct 23, 2025 | The Deep Dive
The Letters of Junius (1769–1772) showcases the anonymous writer’s fearless, razor-sharp attacks on Prime Minister Duke of Grafton, Lord North, Lord Mansfield, and even implicitly King George III—letters that terrified the government while galvanizing public opinion...
by Greg Stuessel | Oct 22, 2025 | The Deep Dive
A Treatise Concerning Political Enquiry (1800) by Tunis Wortman delivers one of the earliest and most forceful American defenses of press freedom—not as a government-granted privilege, but as a natural right and moral duty for every citizen. Written in just four...
by Greg Stuessel | Oct 21, 2025 | The Deep Dive
Man vs. The Welfare State delivers Henry Hazlitt’s devastating critique of the modern welfare state’s promise of instant utopia—full employment, poverty’s end, perpetual prosperity—which he argues relies on coercion, taxation, and monetary manipulation that ultimately...
by Greg Stuessel | Oct 20, 2025 | The Deep Dive
A Conflict of Visions masterfully explains why political opponents consistently divide along the same lines across unrelated issues—from taxes and crime to schools and foreign policy—by revealing two incompatible “visions” of human nature and society. The...
by Greg Stuessel | Oct 19, 2025 | The Deep Dive
The Quest for Cosmic Justice dives into Thomas Sowell’s powerful critique in his book of the same name, exposing how superficial agreement on “justice” masks two incompatible visions tearing society apart. Traditional justice focuses on fair, impartial processes and...
by Greg Stuessel | Oct 18, 2025 | The Deep Dive
Taxpayers in Revolt uncovers a surprising counter-narrative to the Great Depression: while many turned to the New Deal for bigger government, ordinary Americans organized fierce grassroots resistance against skyrocketing local taxes, corruption, and debt that doubled...
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