To: hillsdale1
Good list start...
I would add Robert P. George.
2 posted on
09/28/2010 9:58:35 AM PDT by
JWinNC
(www.anailinhisplace.net)
To: hillsdale1
Victor Davis Hanson
Richard Brookhiser
3 posted on
09/28/2010 10:04:36 AM PDT by
Psalm 73
("Gentlemen, you can't fight in here - this is the War Room".)
To: hillsdale1
Way back when, liberalism meant a conservative/libertarian viewpoint on economics and government along the lines of John Locke and Adam Smith. We now call it “classical liberalism.”
To: hillsdale1
5 posted on
09/28/2010 10:14:26 AM PDT by
bolobaby
To: hillsdale1
6 posted on
09/28/2010 10:18:04 AM PDT by
Prokopton
To: hillsdale1
The three they list are:
1. Historian....... Paul Rahe
2. Economist....... John Taylor
3. Classicist....... Victor Davis Hanson
7 posted on
09/28/2010 10:36:20 AM PDT by
avg_freeper
(Gunga galunga. Gunga, gunga galunga)
To: hillsdale1
“Bran”iac? Are we listing cereal lovers here?
All right, I’ll behave.
Thomas Sowell
8 posted on
09/28/2010 11:03:00 AM PDT by
Wiser now
(Happiness is not an absence of problems, but the ability to deal with them.)
To: hillsdale1
Don't forget Charles Murray.
I can't understand why Thomas Sowell's name hasn't already been mentioned, but it will.
To: hillsdale1
Also, the Manhattan Institute has a lot of very intelligent and thoughtful analysts including:
Nicole Gelinas
To: hillsdale1
If they don’t have to be living I would say Russell Kirk.
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