I wonder what Orville and Wilbur would think about the time when a plane landed in Montana without a pilot.
Read MoreMarcus Aurelius Didn't Have a High Opinion of Government Schools →
I have no desire to be a subject of any potentate but if I had to live under just one of the nearly 100 emperors of ancient Rome, I believe I would choose Marcus Aurelius.
Read MoreIndians, Property Rights, and Ayn Rand →
A festering question concerning Native Americans is that of property rights, the extent to which the various tribes and their individual members possessed them—both when white settlers first arrived and even today.
Read MorePresident Duda of Poland Bestows Upon Me the Grand Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Poland -- 11/11/23 →
November 11, 2023 was a day in Warsaw that I will never forget!
Read MoreStatement to the President and People of Poland, November 11, 2023 →
This is an award I shall proudly display as long as I live. I will use it to help tell the story of this nation’s brave people.
Read MoreRecipients of Poland's Highest Honor →
Unlike many previous presidents, Reagan did not mince words when it came to recognizing the evils of socialism and the Soviet Empire. He, along with other notables, received Poland’s Grand Cross of the Order of Merit.
Read MoreRomans, Good and Bad →
Caesar, Cato, Cicero, Pertinax and more.
Read MoreMontana's Love Affair with William Jennings Bryan →
Perhaps Montanans saw in Bryan a man who, though often wrong, was sincere and incorruptible. If so, they were right. His reputation was never tainted by graft or dishonesty.
Read MoreThe Wild West's Most Infamous Con Artist →
He was as crooked as a dog’s hind leg. We here in Newnan, Georgia are glad he left town.
Read MoreAmerican Presidents: A Discussion with Juliette Sellgren →
Some of the better presidents are the ones most people don’t know.
Read MoreRome's "Last Honest Man" →
Publius Rutilius Rufus (158 B.C.-78 B.C.) attempted to reform Rome's corrupt tax system, and soon found himself accused of corruption and extortion himself.
Read MoreThe Uncommon Ella Knowles Haskell →
Some people may look back on late 19th Century America in disdain because women couldn’t vote. But consider the context: For most of human history, nobody could vote—neither man nor woman. You did as you were told, as serf, slave or subject. Women could not vote in Mexico, for instance, until 1953.
Read MoreThe Island That Saved Hundreds of Refugees →
All over the world, a year before World War II even started, doors were closing to Jewish refugees. One tiny island offered to accept a huge number.
Read MoreGeorgia Liked Bryan →
Were Georgians right when they endorsed William Jennings Bryan all three times he ran for President? Personally, I wouldn’t have voted for him even once, so now you know where I stand.
Read MoreLessons from the 2003 Heat Wave →
The staggering death toll in France is a reminder of what can happen when private initiative is replaced with government “safety nets.”
Read MoreA Tale of Two Fires: Maui and Michigan →
The tragedy in Hawaii reminded Biden of his kitchen; but the horrific nature of it and government’s culpability in it brought to my mind another event, long forgotten.
Read MoreCleopatra's Money Mistakes →
In the face of soaring prices, do you suppose the inflating Ptolemies repented by cutting their spending, balancing their budgets, and restoring sound money?
Read MoreMontana--Cool for Coolidge! →
Did Montanans make the right choice by giving Coolidge their votes in 1924? You bet they did.
Read MoreRemembering a Great Polish Patriot: Jan Nowak-Jezioranski →
Looking to models of courage such as Jan Nowak-Jezioranski for inspiration will help us grow in courage ourselves. We may need it when we least expect it.
Read MoreThe Lesson of Aurelian: Beware of False Reformers →
Like most dictators, Aurelian thought he was special. Inscribed on some of the coins he minted, and which bore his image, was the phrase, deus et dominus natus, meaning “god and born ruler.”
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