Foreign Affairs
A selection of recent articles on this topic
Bystanders to Genocide
“Who today still speaks of the massacre of the Armenians?” —Adolf Hitler, August 22, 1939 The visit…
Very Well, Alone?
By voting narrowly to leave the European Union, the theoretically United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern…
Britain Votes on Brexit Today. Here’s What’s at Stake
Today is the most important day in European politics since November 9, 1989. That was the day…
England Has a Soul, If She Can Keep It
Americans almost invariably refer to the British Isles as “England.” They refer to Scottish writers, including those…
Orlando was Not a Tragedy
Omar Mateen’s murder of forty-nine people in Orlando has been called a tragedy—“the Orlando tragedy,” as we…
A President in Denial
After the June 12th massacre in Orlando, the deadliest act of terrorism in the United States since…
Is There No Moral Law?
The weak and ill constituted shall perish: the first principle of our philanthropy. And one shall help…
Terrorism Is Not Hate
Hate. It’s a word many have used to describe Omar Mateen’s slaughter of fifty people at an…
The Other Assisi
We pilgrims pile into the Basilica of Saint Clare to see the San Damiano cross that spoke…
Briefly Noted
Subverted: How I Helped the Sexual Revolution Hijack the Women’s Movementby sue ellen browder ignatius, 232 pages,…
Only Francis Can Go to China?
Cardinal Pietro Parolin, Secretary of State of the Holy See, recently told an Italian journal that relations…
Where the Icons Aren’t Yet Dry
This monk is not letting us go without a sermon, but he’s earned it. We—a group of…
The Latino Marriage Paradox
Eduardo and Graciela Valdez met on the dance floor of a New York salsa club in 2000.…
Pope Francis, Erich Przywara, and the Idea of Europe
Last Friday, on May 6, Pope Francis was awarded the Charlemagne Prize, which is conferred annually by…
Christian Freedom Amidst Persecution
Christianity and Freedom, Vol. II, Contemporary Perspectives edited by allen d. hertzke & timothy samuel shah cambridge,…