Skip to main content

AU 2025 Mobile Banner


text block float right top
button right top below
text block float right top

    Overview

    This week, Eric and Noah are joined by Acton’s Dan Hugger to discuss his essay in the Spring 2024 issue of Religion & Liberty, “The Rambler and the Transformative Power of Magazines.” Why, even in an age of digital publishing, have print magazines endured? Then the group looks at legislation that has recently moved in Congress to add a definition of anti-Semitism to Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. If we acknowledge that anti-Semitism is a problem on college campuses, is this the best way to address it? And finally, Oklahoma’s charter school board has approved a Catholic charter school. We don’t yet know if this is legal, but is it a wise move by proponents of religious education?

    Subscribe to our podcasts  

    Subscribe to Religion & Liberty

    The Rambler and the Transformative Power of Magazines | Dan Hugger, Religion & Liberty

    The End of Democracy? The Judicial Usurpation of Politics | First Things

    The Paper of Record Meets an Ephemeral Web: An Examination of Linkrot and Content Drift within The New York Times | SSRN

    House passes bill to expand definition of antisemitism amid growing campus protests over Gaza war | Associated Press

    First Religious Charter School Sparks Legal, Philosophical Battles | Wall Street Journal