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Front Porch Republic

Can Driftwood Determine?

Maybe we ought to use our being and thinking not to decide what our lives should be “for” or “against,” but rather what we would like our lives to define.
April 9, 2026

The Age of AI Parenting

Altman, while acknowledging that people can and have parented before AI, stated that he cannot imagine parenting without it.
April 8, 2026

Old Fred’s Night Music

What is the ideal that we sometimes glimpse within the world and which thus inspires our own attempts at order-making, at meaning-making?

Why Cormac McCarthy Stands Alone Among Novelists

McCarthy, a little before the rest of us, had caught a glimpse of Western Civilization’s end.
April 6, 2026

News, Notes, & Podcasts

Jeffrey Bilbro
Newsletter Editor:
Jeffrey Bilbro
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Writing from the Heart: Songs About Sincerity

Boy, I had very little idea what I wanted to say about sincerity when I started recording, so you’ll hear me sincerely try to figure it out as we listen…
April 6, 2026
A Farmer Reading His Paper. Photographed by George W. Ackerman, Coryell County, Texas, September 1931.

Abundance, Chromebooks, and Satellites

This excerpt from Christopher Beha’s new book draws on John Stuart Mill to probe the flaw at the heart of Ezra Klein and Derek Thompson’s technocratic vision of liberalism.
April 4, 2026

Calling All in Transit: Alternative Rock Songs

A friend of mine recently asked me for a Spotify playlist of alternative rock—but I don’t use Spotify, so I decided to make the playlist here. This week on A…
March 30, 2026
A Farmer Reading His Paper. Photographed by George W. Ackerman, Coryell County, Texas, September 1931.

Baseball, Gardening, and the Metaverse

It’s been a rough week for those committed to Wendell Berry’s Terrapin Theory of Technology.
March 28, 2026
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More Articles

Gardening and the Moral Life

For humility, there is nothing like gardening.

The Exemption Option: AI and Believers

Emerging tools have to justify themselves to us more than we have to justify ourselves to emerging tools.
April 2, 2026

Speculators versus Farmers: A Review of The Land Trap

Land is only going to become more expensive and thus ever more unaffordable and inaccessible for the agrarians of the future.

The Weighty News of the World

The 1890s gave rise to the journalistic trope, if it bleeds, it leads. And news has never been the same since.

We Are Not Enemies: What an Iranian Film Reveals About Vengeance and Civility

However strained, the bonds of affection must not be broken.
March 30, 2026

Modern Man’s Problem: Disenchantment or Desecration? A Review of Carl Trueman’s The Desecration of Man

If desecration is the pervasive problem our day, then nothing less than consecration is the answer.

Running Toward A New Life

This is a book for every young man who has ever hit a crisis of meaning or purpose, despite possessing boatloads of knowledge.
March 26, 2026

The Bell Above the Door

What if instead of nuclear power plants and radioactive waste to dispose of we just consumed less electricity?
March 25, 2026

Learning to Unknow: On James K.A. Smith’s Make Your Home in This Luminous Dark

By embracing the discomfort of unknowing, we come into a more profound awareness of love in all its splendor.

The Cult of Efficiency and the Technological Society

Modernity lays at your feet hundreds if not thousands of tools to make our lives cleaner, smoother, and more efficient.

Living in Ælfric’s Orchard

We should remind ourselves of our eternal home by making an image of it, not as an idol but as an icon.

Breakfast with Brother Dave: The Blessing of Intergenerational Friendship

God has gifted me with great friendships, but my friendship with Dave and others like him has uniquely oriented my life.

From the Archive

From the Editor–Local Culture 4.1: The Civil Dissent Issue

Think not, then, of the ubiquitous screens and hideous architecture and suburban metastasis and microwave dinners. Think rather of Eric Voegelin’s famous quip—Voegelin, who said that “no one is obliged…
February 25, 2022

Spiritual Secession: A Conversation with Paul Kingsnorth

" None of your readers need me to tell them that the useful work is practical, particular, small and careful: to get away from screens as much as we can, get…

Tanya Berry’s Faithful Art

Women like Tanya bring artistry and honor to everything they touch: the homes they inhabit, the land they steward, the children they raise. These photographs are testimony to the clear,…
June 15, 2020

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…
August 19, 2019

Cheese Should Be Dangerous

The cheese crafted here came about as a byproduct of a larger whole, the natural dividend of a complete way of life, and this is the foundation of the best…
July 23, 2018