The Beehive Plan

A folklife is made up of the food and craft, the local stories, songs, remedies and rumors—relationships that define a place as much as the geology and ecology do. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Against One-Sided Charity: John Chrysostom’s Reciprocal Giving

True charity draws all people, each one gifted and broken, into an interdependent community. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

“Blackest Land, Whitest People”

From here in my long-time Midwestern location, these lots are unshakeable reminders of a place in Texas where a shameful darkness once surrounded a part of my childhood. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Can There be a National Conservatism?

Here’s the irony: a growing number of conservatives realize that it will require the assistance of the State to correct many of the problems that have been created by the State that was motivated by progressive commitments against the more local, parochial, and particular. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Air Conditioning, Modern Friendship, and Rooftop Farming

“The Great Land Robbery.” In the Atlantic, Vann R. Newkirk II narrates a tragic story about black land ownership in the Mississippi Delta. Between racist lending practices, global commodity markets, and, more recently, corporate purchasers, black landowners are losing ground: “In … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Mud: Our Alma-Pater

If the institutions that oversee our slow twelve-to-eighteen-year process of education are called our alma-mater (nourishing mother), why can’t the dirt-filled, dung-laden places that convey agrarian lessons taught over 20 years be our nourishing father (alma-pater)? | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

The Consumer: Time to Wake the Sleeping Giant

In my first essay here at Front Porch Republic, I wrote about the idea that creation-friendly agriculture is not about going back to old fashioned ways, but is actually quite cutting edge. This is especially the case since what we know about soil is pretty recent knowledge. The c … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Addictive Technology, Land Use, and Saving the Amazon

Most of my reading time this week went to poring over proofs for the first issue of the FPR print journal. We should have copies fresh from the press at the Louisville conference, and if you won’t be able to join us there, stay tuned for ways you can get | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Love and Fear, Expertise and Regulation

Much of the American reading public would be as surprised to find that there was once an environmentalist Right as they would be to find that there was once a pro-life Left. So successfully have the dominant representatives of the American party system entrenched themselves behin … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Picturing Home

Cultivate. Give order. Name. Attend. Reveal. Craft a parable. Homestead. Welcome. In Placemaking and the Arts: Cultivating the Christian Life (IVP Academic, 2018), Jennifer Allen Craft offers these paradigms and more for understanding how the visual arts can train us to be placem … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Beyond Capitalism, National Conservatism, and Millennial Nuns

“Going Home with Wendell Berry.” Amanda Petrusich corresponded with Berry and then spent two days in Port Royal continuing their conversation. The result is a rich and wise conversation in theNew Yorker.Plough Quarterlyhas a new issue that is well worth reading. Titled “Beyond Ca … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Democracy Dies in Delegation

For our elites, democratic values and grand political projects go hand in hand.  Earlier this year, Mark Zuckerberg discussed the importance of democracy in adjudicating social tradeoffs.  Zuckerberg has also recently called for “a more active role for governments and regulators” … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

The Price of Place: Oeconomia over Chrematistike

The age of chivalry is gone. That of sophisters, economists, and calculators has succeeded; and the glory of Europe is extinguished forever.--Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in FranceOn July 2nd, the residents of Lakewood Colorado were asked a very simple, yet consequ … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Rethinking the Good City: Vallejo’s Bold Vision

What Americans Want in CitiesWhat makes a good city? I’ve been thinking a lot about this. What makes for a city people are happy living in, and want to stay in? One answer comes from the Gallup polling organization, with support from the Knight Foundation. A few years ago, Gallup | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

I Am Not a Luddite

In my efforts to point people to various methodologies of eco-agriculture I often encounter those who dispute these approaches. One of the frequent refrains I hear is, “We can’t go back to those old ways, we must use technology to feed the world.”People who make such assertions a … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Moon Missions and the Southern Tradition

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@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

The Right Stuff

Precisely because it is limitless, space is the best place to test the limits of our courage and abilities. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Community and Intuition

Do not seek things too difficult for you, nor examine what is beyond your strength.Think about what is commanded you, for you do not need what the Lord keeps hidden.Do not meddle in what is none of your business, for things beyond human insight have been shown to you.Speculation … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Learning to Die in the Garden

I’m prone to say that the gardening year resembles nothing so much as a succession of heartbreaks, and while it’s possible that this sentiment reveals more about the gardener than the activity, I think there is a universal truth in this sentiment. What with pests, disease, bad se … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Loving—But Not Believing In—Baseball

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@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

A Young Girl’s Guide to Power Tools

At age 12, our daughter discovered that our front yard could be more than a place to turn cartwheels. It was also an evergreen source of income. I’d gladly pay her to mow it, which freed me up to tend the garden, pick berries, or fish the river. It’s time, | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

A Casual Birder

For most of my adult life I’ve considered myself a birder. Some people say “bird-watcher,” but for me that term conjures up the sort of goofy-looking eccentrics you see in Rocky and Bullwinkle or The Far Side. I can’t remember a serious bird enthusiast who called himself or herse … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Take a Hike? (I Would Prefer Not To)

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@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

What Makes Places Great?: A Hypothetical Dialogue between G.K. Chesterton and Milton Friedman

MF: Mr. Chesterton, I know you have not received any training in economics at the University level.  So, I will keep this simple.  The world today, and throughout human history, attests to the fact that countries are made great by allowing individuals to pursue their own personal … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Patriotic Subversives: Distributism as a Political Problem

Distributism as a Problem When people think of Distributism, even people who know a little about it, they tend to see it as something problematic, something more akin to agrarianism and a naïve nostalgia for a rural past, a search for a “golden age” that never existed. In this, | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Convenience, Abortion, and Friendship

I’ll be taking a break from the internet for a couple of weeks to recreate (and to get some writing done). I’m not sure when I’ll resume these weekly Water Dipper posts, but it will likely be the beginning of August. In the meantime, feel free to email me any | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Justice, Sovereignty, and the Throwaway Culture: Reading Charles Camosy

We live in a time of political disruption. In the United States and around the developed world we are seeing nationalist and populist agitation against the established liberal order. While this is a cause of anxiety, it is also a moment of great opportunity. There seems to be bot … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Rise Up, O Saints, and Plant Gardens

Jake Meador’s In Search of the Common Good: Christian Fidelity in a Fractured World is a remarkably successful attempt to bring together the core teachings of Christianity and the community-centered practices of an economic life less dependent on global capitalism. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

In Praise of Religion’s Dark Side

The dark side of religion cannot be completely vanquished because human reason pales in the comparison to the highest reality, which is known through the light and the darkness of the religious experience. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Plastic, Local Feasting, and Family Farms

“Book Review: Dignity by Chris Arnade.” Jake Meador uses Patrick Deneen’s recent work to frame a reading of Arnade’s photographs and stories. In a book that does not shy away from pain and darkness, Jake finds glimpses of the heavenly city for which we long.“Oh, the Places We’ll … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Building Folklore Wealth

Our lives depend upon the restoration of intergenerational stability within our local communities as a norm that is loved and nurtured. Moreover, our recent obsession with measures such as GDP not only undermines our own wellbeing but threatens our relationship with our entire co … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Mr. Jones and Me

Place was also indispensable to our friendship whether we realized it or not. For all our determination to be malcontents, we did secretly love our home. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Puppets and Portraits: Two Victorians

In “The Dreams of Mrs. Flintwinch thicken,” a short chapter of Charles Dickens’ Little Dorrit (1857), the kind-hearted Arthur Clennam visits his childhood home. “Oppressive secrets” pervade the crumbling house and its London neighborhood. The night engulfs Clennam in a sense of o … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Pelagians, Lithium Mines, and Progressive Occultism

“The Politics of Dystopia.” Ross Douthat seems to be thinking about Deneen’s book these days: “On right and left, it has become easier to imagine ways the liberal order might deserve to fall, because of evils generated from within itself.”“Conservative Women and the Intra-Conserv … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Creator as Creature: Rowan Williams on Christ and Creation

Christ the Heart of Creation renders fruitful the richness in, and the virtue of, the Christological grammar that rules faithful speech and thought about the person and nature of Jesus Christ. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Blessed Are the Working Poor

I came to the work of Chris Arnade through his work documenting the social capital of McDonald’s around the United States. In his photos and captions I saw a glimpse of a world I had grown accustomed to: the chaotic and welcoming de-facto community centers springing up in the sha … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Before Ahmari and French, Wills and Bozell

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@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Infinite Baseball review

The official scorekeeper for my sixth-grade baseball team was our catcher’s mom. Sometimes she couldn’t be there, and it would fall to our coach to keep score. Sometimes he didn’t feel like doing it, in which case it would be up to me and my teammates.I have only vague memories | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

“Free America,” Work Colleges, and Seeds

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@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Without Athens, There is No R.E.M.: The Loss of Local Cultures

In high school, I had a friend who simply loathed Michael Stipe. This was in the late nineties, at the tail end of R.E.M.’s cultural dominance, but the band was still seemingly omnipresent. “Everybody Hurts,” “Stand,” “Losing My Religion,” “What’s the Frequency, Kenneth?”—these … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

A Politics of Presence

When we stop trying to be everywhere at once, we have enough time for the meaningful things. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Abortion: Realpolitik, Kulturkampf, and Evangelization

One side has dominated the story while the other has tried to dominate the politics. But separating culture and politics is a self-defeating strategy. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Mythical Mammals, College Libraries, and David French-ism

“More Than Mildly Amusing.” I heartily second Elizabeth Bittner’s recommendation ofMr.Mehan’s Mildly Amusing Mythical Mammals; it’s a children’s book that rewards re-readings, and the glossary combines wit and wisdom.“How Republicans Hurt the Fight Against Abortion.” Writing for … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

The Wonderfully (if Perhaps Insufficiently) Radical Bill McKibben

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@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

Ecce Hortus: A Dispatch from Dumb-Ass Acres

Put in a garden and watch it come to life. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

What Are People For? Control or Love?

The least-discussed chapter in Patrick Deneen’s much-discussedWhy Liberalism Failedis—I would venture—“Technology and the Loss of Liberty.” Similarly, Rod Dreherhas lamentedthat relatively few readers or reviewers discuss the technology chapter inThe Benedict Option. These oversi … | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

The Case for Confucianism in America: How an Ancient Chinese Philosophical Tradition Could Save Our Fraying Democracy

In such times, a centripetal lurch is what we desperately need. | Continue reading


@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago

A Hidden Life, Carbon Credits, and the American Solidarity Party

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@frontporchrepublic.com | 5 years ago