Vietnam and the Republicans
The advantage of The War in Vietnam (the controversial Republican White Paper Prepared by the staff of the Senate Republican Policy Commit
New Right: Future?
A prospectus is going the rounds heralding a new, slick fortnightly magazine, oddly entitled Future the Future referring not, as might be thought,
Frank Chodorov, RIP
There he stood, his tie askew, his balding head disheveled, the ashes from his beloved pipe flying all around, his intelligent and merry eyes twink
Hiroshima Reconsidered
The generation born since World War II and now surging through college classrooms views with less awe than its elders that event which Harry Truman
New Right: National Review’s Anniversary
In the fall of 1965, National Review celebrated its 10th anniversary, and part of the record of its orgy of self-congratulation may be found in its
Palefaces or Redskins: A Profile of Americans
John Lukacs indicates that the roots of the Cold War are to be found in the beginnings of World War II.
Our First Anniversary
This issue marks the beginning of the second year of the publishing of Left and Right.
Frank Meyer on the Communist Bogey-Man
Frank S. Meyer is by far the most intelligent, as well as the most libertarian-inclined, of the National Review stable of editors and staff.
Private Property and Collective Security
Philosophy has fathered a number of other sciences. It is, as we all know, the father of physics which used to be known as natural philosophy.
Cold War Revisionism, The Major Historical Task
One of the most vital struggles in the writing and publishing of history is the conflict between the government’s propaganda myths, enshrined
Tullock on Science and Society
Do we now have the Third Culture that C. P. Snow saw coming to life? It would appear so.
On Conscription
During America’s first great war, waged against Great Britain, the Madison Administration tried to introduce a conscription bill into Congres
Automation: The Retreating Catastrophe
Amateur social scientists such as Norbert Wiener (a professional mathematician) predicted, in 1949, that we faced “a decade or more of ruin a
Labor Unionism, Two Views
If there was anything that characterized the Old Left it was adulation of labor unions and of the process by which the government has created, main
The Economics of Slavery
Confining our attention to large scale slavery, we find that it is historically quite a rare phenomenon.
Liberty and the New Left
Within the past year, all the news media--not only the little magazines and journals of opinion, but even the mass magazines and radio-and-televisi
Pearl Harbor: Twenty-Fifth Anniversary
The cataclysm of Pearl Harbor occurred twenty-five years ago, and yet the average American, bemused by official propaganda, still thinks of Pearl a