In Federalist No. 9, Alexander Hamilton argues that liberty is not preserved by weakening government, but by designing it to withstand human conflict. As polarization deepens and trust in institutions erodes, this essay challenges a familiar instinct: that freedom thrives in the absence of structure. Instead, it asks whether a durable republic—one capable of resisting faction, instability, and collapse—is the very thing that protects both justice and the vulnerable.
Tag: republicanism
USA’s First Animal Rights Political Party Registers First 40 Voters
The Humane Party—which is the nation’s first and currently only political party committed to animal rights—began registering voters yesterday in … More
