Richard Land and Stephan Bauman

CP Guest Contributors

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  • One cheer for Mikhail Gorbachev

    One cheer for Mikhail Gorbachev

    Gorbachev was desperate to reduce defense expenditures in order to reform a stagnant, moribund economy. Reagan sensed an opening and the two ended up meeting at a historic summit in Iceland in October 1986.

  • The Mar-a-Lago raid: A constitutional ‘tipping point’?

    The Mar-a-Lago raid: A constitutional ‘tipping point’?

    So, how do we as Americans step back from this dangerous political precipice? First, the Biden Justice Department should quit leaking to the press, and practice transparency. If they have nothing to hide, then prove it.

  • Salman Rushdie, free speech, Islamic extremism and Chautauqua

    Salman Rushdie, free speech, Islamic extremism and Chautauqua

    Our government and our society must make it unmistakably clear we will not tolerate the kind of violence that was perpetrated against Salman Rushdie. And we will not tolerate those who advocate or reward it, here or overseas.

  • God’s handbook on the divine institution of marriage

    God’s handbook on the divine institution of marriage

    I asked them what the problem was. The wife gave me a 5-minute rendition of all his faults. After about 15 minutes, I guess he had enough. He leaned over, spit in her face, and walked out.

  • The Southern Baptists’ ‘pastor’ controversy: A study in terminology’s pitfalls and their consequences

    The Southern Baptists’ ‘pastor’ controversy: A study in terminology’s pitfalls and their consequences

    What is the controversy roiling Southern Baptists concerning the term “pastor” all about? Is it a major doctrinal disagreement or is it merely a “tempest in a teapot,” unworthy of the heat it has generated? And why, in the larger scheme of things, does it matter?

  • Abolitionists, slaves and slaveholders: Who’s who and what’s what?

    Abolitionists, slaves and slaveholders: Who’s who and what’s what?

    So, the analogy is apt, but the pro-abortionists are playing the rule of the slaveholders, the unborn babies are the slaves, and the pro-lifers are the abolitionists. As Mark Twain once observed, “History seldom repeats itself, but it often rhymes.”

  • The imperial judiciary, 1962-2022: Rest in peace

    The imperial judiciary, 1962-2022: Rest in peace

    Starting with the Earl Warren Supreme Court in the 1950s, the nation’s highest court began gathering greater and greater power unto itself as Congress and the Executive Branch acquiesced and surrendered more and more authority to the Supreme Court. That dangerous imbalance allowed the progressives to win most of the victories they have won over the last half-century by judicial fiat and edict, not by the people’s elected representatives (the Congress and the President).

  • The Supreme Court trifecta of 2022

    The Supreme Court trifecta of 2022

    These two cases, Kennedy v. Bremerton and Carson v. Makin may have finally driven the final nail in the coffin of the so-called “Lemon test.”

  • Pro-abortion violence and officials noncompliance: A dagger aimed at the heart of the rule of law

    Pro-abortion violence and officials noncompliance: A dagger aimed at the heart of the rule of law

    I cannot think, however, of a greater threat to our nation’s rule of law, the bedrock of our entire legal system, than having public officials exercise a self-proclaimed “right” to disobey and ignore laws with which they are in disagreement — laws which they have taken an oath to enforce.

  • Cultural ‘awareness’ but not woke warrior

    Cultural ‘awareness’ but not woke warrior

    Once that fully soaked into my consciousness, and after I shared that new comprehension with my wife, we both agreed that it had to be removed. The treasured memories it held for us were dwarfed by the monstrous and dehumanizing system and culture it symbolized.