Welcome back! I was off last week for an awesome eight-day trip out west to Utah and Wyoming (and slivers of Idaho and Montana). Here are some highlights from our last newsletter two weeks ago.
My most recent column focused on the righteous backlash against so-called "diversity, equity, and inclusion" ("DEI") initiatives, which has begun to take off since the U.S. Supreme Court's long-overdue termination last month of affirmative action programs in university admissions. Last week, Stanford Law School DEI Dean Tirien Steinbach, who was at the epicenter of an on-campus brouhaha back in March when she sided with far-left student protesters against U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit Judge Kyle Duncan, "resigned' (likely under strong pressure). What's more, two powerful letters were sent warning of possible legal action if academic or corporate DEI offices/commissars discriminate whatsoever on the basis of race: 13 Republican state attorneys general sent a powerful missive to the CEOs of all Fortune 100 companies, and Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) sent a short but powerful similar letter to 51 of the largest American and global law firms. The Wall Street Journal even reported last week about "the rise and fall of the chief diversity officer" in corporate America. All of this pushback is proper and salutary. American society, and all leading American institutions, must be color-blind to their core. Martin Luther King Jr. had it right when he spoke of the imperatives of color-blindness; by contrast, modern charlatans like the "anti-racist" Ibram X. Kendi have it dead wrong when they veer into noxious racial determinism.
I recorded two podcast episodes since my last newsletter was released. First, I had on the great Chris Rufo, Manhattan Institute senior fellow and City Journal contributing editor, to discuss his new must-read book, America's Cultural Revolution: How the Radical Left Conquered Everything. Chris is a friend and is simply indispensable to the conservative movement; we had a wide-ranging conversation not merely about his new book but also about our recent experiences visiting Hungary and our mutual support/admiration for Gov. Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.). (You can listen to that episode on Apple, Spotify, or here.) Second, I recorded a solo podcast episode (just out this morning) about the state of the 2024 GOP presidential primary, the pushback against DEI, and the State of Israel's judicial reform debate, which finally saw some real action this week when the Knesset (Israel's national legislature) passed a common-sense bill to strip the Supreme Court of Israel of its unfathomable (and anti-democratic!) ability to veto any governmental law, policy, or even cabinet/ministerial appointment on the extraordinarily subjective and vague grounds that the law/policy/appointment is somehow "unreasonable." (You can listen to that episode on Apple, Spotify, or here.)
In terms of other media hits and appearances since our last newsletter: I joined Rita Panahi on Sky News Australia to discuss the pushback against DEI and the latest Biden family misdeeds (among other topics), recorded a CenterClip audio op-ed on the narrow judicial reform bill the Knesset passed earlier this week, joined "John Bachman Now" on Newsmax to discuss the state of the 2024 GOP presidential primary, joined the "Steak for Breakfast Podcast" to discuss the anti-DEI pushback and the state of the 2024 GOP presidential primary, joined "The Tom Woods Show" to discuss the recent pushback against DEI, joined "Centerpoint" on TBN to discuss the latest Biden family misdeeds, joined the Salt Lake City-based "Rod Arquette Show" to discuss the recent anti-DEI pushback, and (as always) co-hosted two of the three most recent productions of the Edmund Burke Foundation's weekly "NatCon Squad" podcast.
Our additional highlighted right-leaning Newsweek op-eds from the past two weeks include selections from Paul du Quenoy, Michael Broyde, David Brog, Richard A. Epstein, and Kristen Waggoner and Erin Hawley.
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