“All serious political and moral philosophy, and thus any serious social inquiry, must begin with an understanding of human nature. Though society and its institutions shape man, man’s nature sets limits on the kinds of societies we can have. Cicero said that the nature of law must be founded on the nature of man (a natura hominis discenda est natura juris).”
James Q. Wilson and Richard J. Herrnstein, Crime and Human Nature
“I have read that ‘there is no justice until the sword creates it, establishes it, guarantees it, gives it substance and significance.’”
Bernita Harris, whose military family included a grandfather who fought in WWI, interviewed in Ottawa Citizen May 26, 2000
In my latest National Post article, part of the “Right Now” series on “What does conservatism mean in Canada today?”, I argue that it must mean serious attention to the deep constitutional and historical roots of our rights, our security, our prosperity and our open society. And yes, by that I mean Magna Carta.
In my latest Loonie Politics column I say every time a political lie is cut off, including that it was the Clerk of the Privy Council who independently decided to stop the RCMP from seeing key SNC-Lavalin scandal documents, two more sprout in its place unless we scorch the stump.